A/RES/65/229
4.
Recognizes that, in view of the great variety of legal, social, economic and
geographical conditions in the world, not all of the rules can be applied equally in all
places and at all times; and that they should, however, serve to stimulate a constant
endeavour to overcome practical difficulties in their application, in the knowledge that
they represent, as a whole, global aspirations amenable to the common goal of
improving outcomes for women prisoners, their children and their communities;
Encourages Member States to adopt legislation to establish alternatives
5.
to imprisonment and to give priority to the financing of such systems, as well as to
the development of the mechanisms needed for their implementation;
Encourages Member States having developed legislation, procedures,
6.
policies or practices for women in prison or on alternatives to imprisonment for women
offenders to make information available to other States and relevant international,
regional and intergovernmental organizations, as well as non-governmental
organizations, and to assist them in developing and implementing training or other
activities in relation to such legislation, procedures, policies or practices;
Invites Member States to take into consideration the specific needs and
7.
realities of women as prisoners when developing relevant legislation, procedures,
policies and action plans and to draw, as appropriate, on the Bangkok Rules;
Also invites Member States to collect, maintain, analyse and publish, as
8.
appropriate, specific data on women in prison and women offenders;
9.
Emphasizes that, when sentencing or deciding on pretrial measures for a
pregnant woman or a child’s sole or primary caretaker, non-custodial measures
should be preferred where possible and appropriate, with custodial sentences being
considered when the offence is serious or violent;
10. Requests the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime to provide
technical assistance and advisory services to Member States, upon request, in order
to develop or strengthen, as appropriate, legislation, procedures, policies and
practices for women in prison and on alternatives to imprisonment for women
offenders;
11. Also requests the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime to take
steps, as appropriate, to ensure broad dissemination of the Bangkok Rules, as a
supplement to the Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners1 and the
United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for Non-custodial Measures (the Tokyo
Rules),5 and to ensure the intensification of information activities in this area;
12. Further requests the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime to
increase its cooperation with other relevant United Nations entities, intergovernmental
and regional organizations and non-governmental organizations in the provision of
relevant assistance to countries and to identify needs and capacities of countries in
order to increase country-to-country and South-South cooperation;
13. Invites specialized agencies of the United Nations system and relevant
regional and international intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations to
engage in the implementation of the Bangkok Rules;
14. Invites Member States and other donors to provide extrabudgetary
contributions for such purposes, in accordance with the rules and procedures of the
United Nations.
71st plenary meeting
21 December 2010
4