At a jail in northwestern Spain, a sole female inmate played football with 21 male convicts, part of a push towards mixed prison living that remains rare in Europe.
“Let go of the ball!” Ambra, a 25-year-old Albanian who did not want to give her surname, shouted at one of her male teammates.
She pushed them as much as she was pushed to try to gain control of the ball.
“Why should prison be the only place without mixed spaces?” she wanted to know.
Men and women have been cohabiting since 2021 in one wing of the Teixeiro prison near La Coruna in Spain’s verdant Galicia region.
The aim is to better prepare inmates for their reintegration into society once they are released.
Twenty of the 55 inmates in the jail’s Nelson Mandela cell block are women.
They and the men take part together in daily activities such as exercise, group therapy and vocational training.
They work and eat together.
The rest of the time, they live in separate cells although in the same hallway.
Inmates must volunteer to be part of this block and are selected based on their behaviour.
Prisoners convicted of sexual violence are excluded.
At the canteen, inmate Cristina prepared meals with other women and men, while at the gym Helga worked out with her male counterparts.
– ‘Good idea’ –
Ambra, the 25-year-old Albanian, said men in the mixed-gender block sometimes misinterpret her friendliness and think she “wants to hook up, or something like that”.
“So I put up a barrier,” she explained.
Ana Suarez, a counsellor at Erguete, a non-governmental organisation that helps people battling addictions and works with inmates in the jail, said “sexist behaviours happen inside prison just like outside”.
The prison offers workshops to inmates on “deconstructing masculinity”.
The prison’s management said it has not experienced “any serious incidents” in the mixed block, which was in “great demand” from inmates wishing to join it.
Elsewhere in Europe, mixed jail blocks are not common.
In neighbouring France, for example, where coed incarceration has been authorised since 2009, there are no jails where men and women are kept in the same area as in Teixeiro.
Men and women in French jails mix only during scheduled activities.
“I think it’s a very good idea to have men and women cohabiting because that’s how life is outside,” said Ambra.