Inspector General

Inspector of Prisons

Inspector of Prisons

37/100

Summary

The Inspector of Prisons is established by ss. 30-32 of the Prisons Act 2007 and appointed by the Minister for Justice for a term not exceeding 5 years. The Inspector is independent in the performance of functions and may enter any prison at any time, request records from governors, and investigate management or operational matters. The role is advisory only: the Inspector cannot adjudicate individual prisoner complaints, has no subpoena or compulsion powers (cooperation is on a best-efforts basis), and has no disciplinary authority over staff. Annual and special reports go to the Minister, who lays them before the Oireachtas and publishes them — with a ministerial power to omit matters on security or public-interest grounds, constituting executive pre-publication review.

Independence Scorecard

Independence Score: 37/100 (weak)
37/100
Weak
Methodology v0.1
AppointmentExecutive appointment
Term length5 years
Removal standardFor cause only
Budget independenceExecutive discretion
Subpoena powerNo
Compel testimonyNo
Records accessFull access
Public reports requiredYes
Pre-publication reviewExecutive review

Statute

Name
Prisons Act 2007
Citation
No. 10 of 2007, ss. 30-32
Full text
Full text of law →

Jurisdiction scope

All prisons and places of detention managed by the Irish Prison Service