Male arrestees charged with minor infractions such as vagrancy, loitering, or traffic violations were excluded from the project. |
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She pleaded guilty to committing vagrancy by being a common prostitute or nightwalker. |
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Famously, he spent a spell as a Highgate Cemetery gravedigger, and was later also deported from Spain for vagrancy while busking in Barcelona. |
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On Thursday, six of the homeless people who were arrested for vagrancy were released. |
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It is apparent that the authorities lack the determination and will power to solve the persistent problem of vagrancy. |
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The report enumerates among the causes of vagrancy maltreatment, death of parents, search for work and migration. |
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Most children in conflict with the law have committed petty crimes or such minor offences as vagrancy, truancy, begging or alcohol use. |
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Those that do not secure futures for themselves either formally or informally can fall into vagrancy, petty crime, prostitution, drug abuse, etc. |
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It has to deal with issues that affect its activity, notably incivility in the railway system and vagrancy in stations. |
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Why and how were the Uzbeks detained on charges of vagrancy, and not on charges appropriately related to the detention of asylum seekers? |
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He saw depression conditions, was jailed for vagrancy, and in 1894 became a militant socialist. |
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Besides cutting the cash payments, more conservative places would surely have tougher vagrancy laws and enforce them properly. |
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From these definitions, we can deduce that child vagrancy refers to children drifting. |
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Gainful employment was the best solution to the problem of vagrancy and begging. |
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It serves as a bridge between the street, the bush, war, mines, vagrancy, non-formal and formal education, and finally professional life. |
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The Southern states passed the Black Codes to deprive the freedman from voting after the Civil War, which meant they were routinely charged with crimes such as vagrancy and moral turpitude. |
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Psychological problems and addiction can lead to vagrancy. |
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They operated like mobile schools, catering to the needs of the Bedouin community, providing services and protecting children from neglect and vagrancy. |
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As such, begging and vagrancy are regarded as an offence and an infringement of the Penal Code, rather than as a social problem of which the victim is the beggar or vagrant. |
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Under-performance among working-class boys has become a particular concern for the government, because it is associated with high rates of vagrancy and crime. |
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The detention for up to 30 days of individuals suspected of vagrancy is an administrative measure carried out by the militia with procuratorial approval under article 11 of the Militia Act. |
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The distribution of recreational kits in primary schools and remedial teaching centres for childcare during school holidays would help protect them during a time of the year conducive to idleness and vagrancy. |
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This sets off the vicious circle of deviancy and repression: starting from the point where vagrancy is considered an offence, criminalisation of children in street situations engenders more serious forms of delinquency. |
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This is done by fans from all over the world and, although considered vagrancy, is part of the Wimbledon experience in itself. |
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It is thought to be a nuisance, harmful to the environment, and is often associated with vagrancy. |
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In earlier times walking generally indicated poverty and was also associated with vagrancy. |
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Police arrested the men on vagrancy charges and efforts are now underway to repatriate them. |
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The 53 young people incarcerated during that period were convicted of crimes such as assault, being drunk and disorderly, vagrancy, larceny and vandalism. |
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Any convicted of vagrancy would be slung out. |
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A further shortcoming is that is that the law continues to consider cases of begging and vagrancy from the perspectives of security and the Penal Code. |
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In Victoria, begging is a criminal offence punishable by imprisonment under the Vagrancy Act. |
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