Down, Not Out S2 Ep3: Women and Homelessness

The Secret Life of Prisons podcast - A podcast by Prison Radio Association - Mondays

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1 in 7 adults in prison were experiencing homelessness before entering custody, and fewer than half of people released from prison last year had settled accommodation on release. But what do we know about women who experience homelessness?     Phil and Paula have teamed up with the Orwell Foundation and the Centre for Homelessness Impact to bring you another three-part series looking at the intertwined issues of homelessness, social deprivation, crime and justice.     Down, Not Out is the companion podcast to The Orwell Prize for Reporting Homelessness 2024.     Host Paddy O'Connell, who is a friend of The Prison Radio Association and is also a judge of the new prize, talks to experts and people who've experienced homelessness, to get a better idea of the scale of the problem and how it might be solved.     Episode 3 gets into some of the gritty issues and contains compelling stories, examining the issues faced by women experiencing homelessness and why data on this is so lacking. What’s being done to fill this gap?     Secret Life of Prisons   Presenters: Paula Harriott and Phil Maguire Producer: Andrew Wilkie     Orwell Foundation Host: Paddy O'Connell Editor and Producer: Alex Grundon   Producer: Michelle Featherstone Executive Producer: Liz Wallace     Contributors   Professor Jean Seaton, Director of The Orwell Foundation   Freya Marshall Payne, an academic focussing on women and homelessness, who has personal experience of it.   Ligia Teixeira, Founding Chief Executive of the Centre For Homelessness Impact, our partners in this podcast.   With special and heartfelt thanks to Richard Blair, George Orwell’s son, for narrating an extract of his dad’s book for the podcast.     The Orwell Prize for Reporting Homelessness is open for entries until 31 March 2024. Entry details are available here: https://www.orwellfoundation.com/the-orwell-prizes/about/about-the-prizes/reporting-homelessness/     You can also enter by post. The address is The Orwell Foundation, IAS, University College London, WC1E 6BT. Please include a contact number or email address for someone who can reach you, if you can.