Prisoners Rights

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    Prisoners Rights

    Prisoner rights are important because they prevent prisons from taking advantage of people. They also help to ensure that the punishment fits the crime. Without prisoner rights, those who are responsible for ensuring that society is safe from people who cannot live by society’s rules would be free to treat prisoners whatever way they saw fit, and abuse would be commonplace. Even though prisoners lose a lot of their citizen’s rights when they are convicted, they still have certain rights that make

    Words: 289 - Pages: 2

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    Prisoner Rights

    The importance of a prisoners rights are to make sure that even though the prisoner is incarcerated that they have the same rights as they had before their incarceration. According to text fifty years ago the prisoner had no rights and they were considered to be outlaws or outcasts in society. The rights of the prisoner are important because the prisoner has a way of being able to open up law suits because of the overcrowding or the poor conditions. The issue of prisoner’s rights has brought a great

    Words: 699 - Pages: 3

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    Prisoner Rights

    Prisoner Rights Robert Bregante CJS230 April 17, 2011 Michael Lew Prisoner Rights A major part of the evolution within the prison system is prisoner rights. Even though citizens loose many of their rights once committing a felony, there are still rights afforded to those individuals incarcerated. Prisoner rights are important to maintaining balance within the prison system. They give the prisoners a voice, which prevents prison officials from abusing their power. Prisoner rights are necessary

    Words: 1245 - Pages: 5

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    Prisoners Rights

    high-school dropout from a broken home” (Society, 2013). “Federal researchers found, for example, that many prisoners are reasonably well-educated. More than six out of 10 prisoners are high school graduates, and many attended college. A majority of federal prison inmates and nearly half of all state prisoners are white or white Hispanic, not African American. More than four out of 10 prisoners were raised in two-parent families, and more than half had fulltime jobs before their arrest” (Society,

    Words: 954 - Pages: 4

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    Civil Rights of Prisoners

    The reason why someone is in a prison is because they violated the law. There have been many debates over their rights and what is believed to be humane. Others agree that if you do the crime than you should do the time and you shouldn’t have the luxuries that law abiding citizens have on the outside. If you think about it, they should be given just the essentials which are food, water and shelter. The purpose of the punishment should be based upon the crime. They have different facilities for different

    Words: 517 - Pages: 3

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    Plato's Truth In The Lesson By Toni Cade Bambara

    Plato’s Truth in “The Lesson” by Toni Cade Bambara Imagine a prisoner who was born in a cave and have never seen anything besides a wall is one day released. When he leaves the cave and approaches the light, his eyes hurt and “he is not able to see anything at all of what are now called realities.” This metaphoric example shows that when a person is placed in an uncomfortable situation, he is first in denial. He doesn’t want to accept things that he sees as reality, continuing to live according to

    Words: 1390 - Pages: 6

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    Allegory of the Cave

    stages as the prisoner starts to come to the realization that he has been living an illusion all along. As the illusion turns into a realization, one becomes familiar with the interpretation Plato intended for one to understand the importance of education. Plato had the assertion that man was born ignorant yet had the capacity to fulfill his own personal knowledge. Socrates begins to set up a scenario where there are human beings who have been living in a cave since birth. The prisoners are “chained

    Words: 777 - Pages: 4

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    Prisoner

    | | | | | | | | |EARLY DAYS IN CUSTODY – RECEPTION IN, FIRST NIGHT

    Words: 10325 - Pages: 42

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    The Republic

    fire, the statues cast shadows across the wall that the prisoners are facing. The prisoners watch the stories that these shadows play out, and because these shadows are all they ever get to see, they believe them to be the most real things in the world. When they talk to one another about “men,” “women,” “trees,” or “horses,” they are referring to these shadows. These prisoners represent the lowest stage on the line—imagination. A prisoner is freed from his bonds, and is forced to look at the fire

    Words: 3699 - Pages: 15

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    And Will Our Pupils

    trapped in a cave of misleading wealth of information. Now these prisoners have been here since birth, and have never seen day light or the opening of the cave. The prisoners were bound to rocks, their arms and legs were tied and their head is tied still so that they would not be able to look at anything but the stonewall in front of them witch represents a pritive movie screen. This obviously to me is representing the prisoners accepting the fact that there in no other things in life to live for

    Words: 971 - Pages: 4

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