Add this to the incapacitation benefit, and there is a clear and unambiguous case that locking up criminals is good for the community. |
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Under Malawian law, the vice-president automatically takes power once the office is vacant through death, incapacitation or impeachment. |
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This medical condition could result in a sudden decrement in performance or in complete incapacitation. |
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A device such as the interlock is a form of partial incapacitation. |
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Neither driver inattentiveness nor incapacitation are therefore considered to have played a role in this accident. |
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Before Goldfinger can escape, however, the U. S. troops attack, having been only faking incapacitation. |
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Given the difficulty of identifying such offenders with certainty, the principle of incapacitation is controversial. |
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There was less support for what might be termed the more traditional purposes of sentencing, namely deterrence and incapacitation. |
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Let us stand together for parliamentary democracy and against its incapacitation. |
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The infrequent application of the Act makes it unlikely that, as enforced, it could yield a significant incapacitation effect. |
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The policy implications of these studies appeared clear: the incapacitation of these chronic offenders could occasion major reductions in crime. |
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Even the lowend estimates suggest that incapacitation prevents large numbers of crimes. |
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Some questions remain: what will be the duration of electrical incapacitation? |
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Must not suffer from a condition which could result in sudden incapacitation. |
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It is also unclear how the projectiles will cause electrical incapacitation. |
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The infection then leads to work incapacitation, hence poverty, and another shock to the stability of family life. |
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The three strangers were really three angels sent by God to allow Abraham to perform the kindness he longed to do, in spite of his pain and incapacitation. |
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That way, the Senate still slows things down, but not to the point of incapacitation. |
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Yet progressives have, if anything, more reason to worry about the incapacitation of government than conservatives. |
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Patients whose postoperative courses were worse than expected cited reasons such as unanticipated pain, fatigue, and more incapacitation than expected. |
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Additional medical investigations need to be carried out to ensure that there are no complications of diabetes that might increase the risk of sudden or subtle incapacitation during flight. |
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From a utilitarian point of view, such collective incapacitation strategies would needlessly incarcerate many individuals not at risk of reconviction. |
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The death or mental or physical incapacitation of a mother who is not employed in the 120 days following childbirth also entitles the father to this allowance. |
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I dare not whisper to myself a pension on this side of absolute incapacitation and infirmity, till years have sucked me dry. |
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But the idea was given some credence by the strange incapacitation of Yegor Gaidar, a former Russian prime minister, who thinks he was himself poisoned in Ireland on the day that Litvinenko died. |
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It was only recently, during Sheikh Zayed's final incapacitation, that it got its first female cabinet minister. Yet none of this has tarnished the sheikh's reputation at home. |
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This could increase the probability of injury or incapacitation through extended exposure to smoke or fumes, or could deter crews from using them, especially during periods of high cockpit workload. |
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In 1987 Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali executed a constitutional coup by invoking an article that allowed for the replacement of the president on grounds of death, illness, or incapacitation. |
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If the result of such crime is a loss, amputation or incapacitation of an organ, or any other disability, the penalty shall be 10 to 20 years in prison. |
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Separation from service due to the total incapacitation or death of the insured person before he reaches the age of 55 shall be deemed equivalent to such resignation. |
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More abstractly, such understanding of risk was predicated on the implied failure of rehabilitative interventions and the tacit understanding of incapacitation as a preferable penal strategy. |
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In criminal justice terminology, ignition interlocks constitute a form of incapacitation that prevents impaired driving by physically stopping a vehicle from being operated if the intended driver has had too much to drink. |
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Penologists agree that our incapacitation policy has reduced the crime rate, but they disagree over the amount. |
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Toxic chemical: any chemical which through its chemical action on life processes can cause death, temporary incapacitation or permanent harm to humans or animals. |
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In both cases the person who carries the material shall also be subject to a special incapacitation by a double term of the imposed prison sentence. |
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In Spain, the disability is graded on a scale from 1-4 where one is permanent partial incapacitation and four is gross incapacitation and the compensation is then paid accordingly. |
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Smoke inhalation can therefore quickly lead to incapacitation and loss of consciousness. |
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Incapacitation of any member of the flight crew, including that which occurs prior to departure if it is considered that it could have resulted in incapacitation after take-off. |
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Until the nineteenth century without developed prison systems, there was frequently no workable alternative to insure deterrence and incapacitation of criminals. |
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