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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 4 page paper that provides an overview of prisoner rights. Specific pieces of legislation and current issues are explored. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KW60_KFpririt.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
of punishment as little as a few hundred years ago. Ever since violations of cultural norms proved detrimental to the establishment of civilizations, humanity has used the instrument of law
as a way to remove problematic elements from society. In the past, monarchic interpretations of law established conditions such that punishment was often utilized as a powerful means of socially
deterring further criminality through public whippings, floggings, beheadings, and hangings. Such behavior was still in effect as recently as the last 19th century in the United States. Overtime, however, via
political intervention through democratic channels, prisoner rights have significantly evolved, such that individuals in prison now have a wide number of legislative and practical instruments in place by which to
protect their fundamental rights from potential abuses. This paper will provide an overview of that evolution as well as the implementation of prisoner rights in the current day. This paragraph
helps the student explain the basic concept of prisoner rights. Prisoner rights were established as a means to provide legal protection for a social class that otherwise had no access
to such protections: prisoners. As the concept of the republic began to spread throughout Western society and the utility of the monarchic model of leadership began to dissolve, it became
apparent that the punitive systems in place were rife with the potential for abuses by the state. Social critics argued that even if states used the instrument of law to
imprison certain individuals, that state still had an obligation to respect the fundamental humanity of those individuals in terms of preserving basic rights. More recently, political activism has been used
as an effective tool for exposing injustices in the treatment of prisoners and instituting legislation to prevent those injustices from happening. The result is that prisoner rights are now generally
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