AGRARIAN REFORM 1987 Philippine Constitution Article II‚ Sec. 21 “The State shall promote comprehensive rural development and agrarian reform.” Republic Act No. 6657 - it is the present agrarian reform law implemented nationwide. - known as The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform. - signed into law by the former President Corazon C. Aquino on June 10‚ 1988. - it was implemented the government program known as Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program. HISTORY OF AGRARIAN REFORM (From precolonial
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women’s prisons like before the 1800s? “Women were punished as men were‚ with the exception that pregnant women were often spared punishment until after they had given birth. Women were generally mixed with male prisoners and supervised by male jailers‚ which made the women doubly subject to abuse and exploitation.”(Foster‚ 2006) Women who violated the law‚ then‚ also violated their subservient position and were seen as morally suspect as well as criminal. Prior to the development of prisons in the
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happening in our prison here in the united states. One of theses is the use of solitary confinement in our jails. Prisons systems only have one effective way of punishment in prison. The prisons provide the inmates with housing‚ medication‚ and food. Maybe not the best food but it does the job. All of these are basic human needs for survival. Thus makinging them human rights. You cannot take these rights from an inmate. These are the only rights and freedoms they have within a prison. So how do you
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United State‚ many prisons are overcrowded. “In the U.S. many prisons are overcrowded; with about 2.3 million people be behind bars.” As a result‚ the prisoners become territorial. Overcrowded prison lead to more violence between prisoner and correction officers. (Major Problems‚ Issues & Trends Facing Prisons Today2003-2017). Today‚ some of the major issues that prisons faces are assault‚ gangs and metal heath. Prison cell blocks are mean for one inmate at a time but some of prison cell blocks has
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Private prisons scattered across the country house tens of thousands inmates. The companies behind some of the largest private prisons claim they are lifting the weight of taxpayer dollars funding federal prisons. In a billion dollar industry‚ many find it hard to believe that they’re not working for their own best interest. Humans rights organizations across the country have challenged the corporations behind the industry. These groups argue that this system doesn’t work to rehabilitate prisoners
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because 93% of all inmates will eventually be released from prison. A 2009 study of 37 states‚ revealed that the recidivism rate for males was 37.6% and 29.3% for females (Bohm & Haley‚ 2012). These numbers beg the question of what is the true goal of our prison system. Critics have debated these questions for years. Should the goal be to rehabilitate or simply incarcerate those who have committed crimes against society? Can the prison system actually achieve the goal of rehabilitation? Do released
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Health Care Reform: Lessons Learned from Massachusetts and How They Might Apply to the ACA Introduction For the past several years‚ Massachusetts (MA) has led the country in implementing health reform policies aimed at increasing individual‚ employer and government accountability in the provision of health insurance coverage. The purpose of this report is to analyze the outcomes of MA reform to date‚ determine what lessons to learn from the MA experience‚ and determine whether these lessons
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Contexts http://ctx.sagepub.com/ Beyond Crime and Punishment: Prisons and Inequality Bruce Western and Becky Pettit Contexts 2002 1: 37 DOI: 10.1525/ctx.2002.1.3.37 The online version of this article can be found at: http://ctx.sagepub.com/content/1/3/37 Published by: http://www.sagepublications.com On behalf of: American Sociological Association Additional services and information for Contexts can be found at: Email Alerts: http://ctx.sagepub.com/cgi/alerts Subscriptions: http://ctx.sagepub
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Analysis of “Why Prisons Don’t Work” In his essay “Why Prisons Don’t Work” by Wilbert Rideau‚ the author has sent to the Louisiana State Penitentiary in 1962 to be executed or imprisoned for life. He presents the idea that prisons don’t work because people go in and come out the same way‚ unchanged. He says that authorities think the best solution is to “get tougher” by slowing down on crime and locking away the criminals in prisons‚ but Rideau had an experience in one of those prisons and knows that
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Supermax prisons are often referred to as the prison within a prison. With the increase of prison population throughout the nation and the increase in violence‚ prison officials sought to curb the rate of violence. Their answer was the supermax prison system. Designed to hold hundreds of inmates in Administrative Segregation‚ prison officials sought to lower violence by housing the worst offenders in solitary confinement (Latessa and Holsinger‚ 2011‚ pp. 79-81). Proponents of the supermax systems
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