Corston Coalition
Unique funding model a key to reducing the number of women in
prison
The Corston
Independent Funders’ Coalition (CIFC), of which the Trust is a
member, has published an
external evaluation on the work it has undertaken since 2008.
The report shows that its unique approach to funding advocacy has
ensured the crucial issue of women in prison remains a priority for
the government and UK public.
In the decade since the start of 2000 the number of women in
prison had risen by 60%. Most served ineffective and wasteful short
sentences of six months or less. With many having experienced high
rates of mental health problems, sexual abuse, domestic violence
and substance misuse, custodial sentences were increasingly seen to
be adding to the trauma, chaos and disruption to the lives of the
women and their children.
In an unprecedented move, during June 2008, concerned that their
grant-making investments in this field were being applied to a
failing system, more than 20 independent philanthropic foundations
formed the CIFC to challenge the government to implement the
Corston Report. This called for an end to putting non-violent women
offenders in jail and moves towards placing them in far more
effective community solutions.
The aim of the CIFC was to:
• Give a single voice to the concerns of funders in relation to the
treatment of women offenders
• Keep the women’s agenda in the criminal justice system in the
public eye
• Work with the Government to implement the Corston report and
ensure the women’s agenda was not lost to the public spending
squeeze
The evaluation, undertaken by the CASS Business School’s Centre
of Charity Effectiveness, demonstrates the impact the CIFC has had.
It finds that through funder advocacy and collaboration the CIFC
achieved outcomes that individual trusts and foundations could not
have achieved alone. Its contribution was helpful and timely,
demonstrating the role of funder advocacy and the potential of
funder-Government collaboration.
Achievements include:
• An expanded network of women’s centres offering alternatives to
custody
• A new national body supporting women’s centres – Women’s Breakout
– has received sufficient MoJ funding to secure its future for the
next few years
• The Prison Minister publically declaring that he would build on
the work started by his predecessor, Labour minister, Maria Eagle,
and reduce the number of women in prison by the supporting a
network of women only community provision
At the report’s launch, the CIFC announced that they are to
continue their work as more needs to be done to establish a just
and proportionate response to women caught up in the criminal
justice system and for their children who were inadvertently
punished as a result.
Download a copy of "Funders in colaboration: a review of the
Corston Independent Funders' Coalition (CIFC)" (491
kb)