A/RES/65/229
Annex
United Nations Rules for the Treatment of Women Prisoners and
Non-custodial Measures for Women Offenders (the Bangkok Rules)
Preliminary observations
1.
The Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners1 apply to all
prisoners without discrimination; therefore, the specific needs and realities of all
prisoners, including of women prisoners, should be taken into account in their
application. The Rules, adopted more than 50 years ago, did not, however, draw
sufficient attention to women’s particular needs. With the increase in the number of
women prisoners worldwide, the need to bring more clarity to considerations that
should apply to the treatment of women prisoners has acquired importance and
urgency.
2.
Recognizing the need to provide global standards with regard to the distinct
considerations that should apply to women prisoners and offenders and taking into
account a number of relevant resolutions adopted by different United Nations
bodies, in which Member States were called upon to respond appropriately to the
needs of women offenders and prisoners, the present rules have been developed to
complement and supplement, as appropriate, the Standard Minimum Rules for the
Treatment of Prisoners and the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for
Non-custodial Measures (the Tokyo Rules)5 in connection with the treatment of
women prisoners and alternatives to imprisonment for women offenders.
3.
The present rules do not in any way replace the Standard Minimum Rules for
the Treatment of Prisoners or the Tokyo Rules and, therefore, all relevant provisions
contained in those two sets of rules continue to apply to all prisoners and offenders
without discrimination. While some of the present rules bring further clarity to
existing provisions in the Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners
and in the Tokyo Rules in their application to women prisoners and offenders, others
cover new areas.
4.
These rules are inspired by principles contained in various United Nations
conventions and declarations and are therefore consistent with the provisions of
existing international law. They are addressed to prison authorities and criminal
justice agencies (including policymakers, legislators, the prosecution service, the
judiciary and the probation service) involved in the administration of non-custodial
sanctions and community-based measures.
5.
The specific requirements for addressing the situation of women offenders have
been emphasized at the United Nations in various contexts. For example, in 1980, the
Sixth United Nations Congress on the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of
Offenders adopted a resolution on the specific needs of women prisoners, 18 in which it
recommended that, in the implementation of the resolutions adopted by the Sixth
Congress directly or indirectly relevant to the treatment of offenders, recognition
should be given to the specific problems of women prisoners and the need to provide
the means for their solution; that, in countries where it was not yet done, programmes
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18
Sixth United Nations Congress on the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of Offenders, Caracas,
25 August–5 September 1980: report prepared by the Secretariat (United Nations publication, Sales
No. E.81.IV.4), chap. I, sect. B, resolution 9.
5