Syringe exchange schemes remain a major political issue because they are seen as reflections of the failure to keep prisons drug-free. |
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We may all stand disgusted when we see the state of some foreign prisons, but maybe we should take a leaf out of their book. |
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The wardens of some of the police court prisons say they have more public spitters in their custody than any other class of offender. |
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The warden of prisons was contacted for information on the convict's behavior on the chain gang, or in a few cases on the State Farm. |
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Yet, unaccountably, once he was faced with prisons, prisoners and warders, Balfour stopped entertaining the people. |
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In February the United States reached a benchmark of 2 million individuals in its prisons and jails. |
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Last year the number of inmates in the nation's prisons and jails reached nearly 1,932,000, a record number. |
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We have also had one of the major political parties advocating franchise rights for prisoners in HM prisons. |
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Based on Rayleigh scattering, the sensor can be used to monitor perimeters around secure facilities and prisons. |
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Prison stories abound, but the keepers of the prisons and the keepers of the information tell very different stories from the prisoners. |
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Inside Australian prisons the keepers and the kept eyed each other suspiciously waiting for some indication of the other's intentions. |
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We pass under the Bridge of Sighs, which leads into the old prisons where Casanova was once held captive. |
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There are policy groups who recommend reinvesting the money spent on prisons to community redevelopment. |
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You fail to address the internal terrorism that is carried out in the political prisons and work camps. |
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Given that he has spent much of his life in reformatories and prisons, he is, we're led to believe, somewhat naive about the outside world. |
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We estimate his proposals will double the number of lifers in our prisons, which will increase the huge overcrowding problem. |
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At that time there was a lifer population of some 5200 prisoners, of whom over 3700 were mandatory lifers, in prisons in England and Wales. |
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It reports that the lifer population in U.S. prisons has more than tripled in the past two decades. |
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The Tories promise to build more prisons, which will have the likely side effect of creating more addicts and reoffenders. |
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We saw in the discussion on organizations as psychic prisons that rationality is potentially a form of repressed sexuality. |
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The prisons retain a federal connection to the central administration in Moscow. |
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He tells stories and philosophizes as the movie ambles through the countryside, stopping at dumps, roadhouses, revivalist churches and prisons. |
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Even some U.S. prisons have now started urban gardens, which can be on rooftops as well as on the ground. |
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Next door to a rose-colored, angel-bedecked church, the boxy school glowers behind barred gates like those that surround prisons. |
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Inmates in three California prisons are being kept in their cells on 24-hour-a-day lockdowns to save money on overtime pay for guards. |
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Rwanda's prisons and lock-ups house close to 112,000 genocide suspects and another 5,000 convicts. |
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But growing numbers of prisoners, whether held in other police lock-ups or prisons, are still being incarcerated in atrocious conditions. |
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Several states have passed statutes providing for compulsory asexualization of inmates of insane asylums and prisons. |
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Scots should take a very keen interest in what happens in our prisons for two reasons, he says. |
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In the smaller prisons all prisoners were surveyed, while in the three largest prisons one half of the population was randomly sampled. |
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The company also makes tamales, burritos and enchiladas and supplies Texas prisons, the U.S. military and restaurant chains. |
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All these are Government slaves, and are carried off at once to one of the three great government prisons or bagnios. |
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He argues that private prisons should be judged not purely on cost terms but also on what they are achieving compared with other options. |
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That silence builds our prisons, and I'd contributed my own share of bricks and steel. |
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The basic pay rates of staff in private prisons are comparable to publicly paid prison officers. |
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Most of the former soldiers have already served time in Soviet prisons for war crimes. |
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Casseroles were unveiled from Saran Wrap prisons and the tiki torches that ringed the patio were lit. |
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Step inside, then and see for yourself the world of prisons and their guests, the working of the criminal and not so criminal minds. |
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In yesterday's note, I forgot to mention that we also explored some abandoned mineshafts and prisons. |
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He also spoke extensively on the subject of social misfits being sent to Irish prisons. |
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In Arizona, officials say, more than a hundred prison guards are serving overseas, leaving their already crowded prisons badly short-staffed. |
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The two new prison blocks were opened this year and were intended to be a showpiece of how prisons should be. |
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So just as prisoners are cast out of mainstream society, prisons exist largely out of mainstream public life. |
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With the collapse of the Soviet economy, prisons could no longer function as an industrial monolith. |
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He is the lawyer who plunged the Scottish Executive into a compensation crisis by successfully challenging slopping out in prisons. |
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Sixteen foreign nationals are currently being held under these conditions in UK prisons. |
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In the worst of our overcrowded local prisons, inmates may spend 23 hours a day in a shared cell with an unscreened toilet. |
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He said it was natural for the public to feel unsympathetic towards prisoners at a time when crime was rampant and prisons overflowing. |
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Because most prisons are built upstate, many families have difficulty making the long trips. |
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They will talk of prisons in Greece, of frightful justice systems, and of a nerve-racking ordeal which the enthusiast is never likely to forget. |
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Which means, effectively, sending more people to prison at a time when our prisons are straining to breaking point. |
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I do agree however, that security should be boosted in many prisons to reduce the likelihood of breakouts. |
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There had been nineteen more successful breakouts from prisons across the country. |
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The new Board assumed responsibility for 38 local county prisons, 96 bridewells and four convict prisons. |
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I've seen my fair share of brigs and prisons and I've seen them on both sides of the wall. |
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The precise number held in Soviet prisons during that period has become a matter of guesswork. |
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Tuberculosis has swept through prisons and other institutions, and the rates of venereal disease, hepatitis, and AIDS have grown. |
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The fact that nonviolent people are brutalized and destroyed for life in prisons is met with a shrug. |
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The inmates say the new prisons leave them isolated and vulnerable to abuse by guards. |
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One in four inmates in federal and state prisons is in for drug-related offences, most non-violent. |
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Our prisons are already filled with non-violent drug offenders, many serving mandatory sentences of 15 years to life for small amounts of drugs. |
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But it was a pastime which landed him a spell in one of Greece's most notorious prisons. |
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In enclosed places like monasteries, nunneries and prisons, the infection of one person usually meant the infection of all. |
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State budget deficits are often amplified by costs associated with prisons bulging with nonviolent drug offenders. |
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They emphasize violent criminals to build prisons and they fill them with drug offenders, and insist on the death penalty. |
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The government has so far refused to consider the exchange and the captives are condemned to many more years in their jungle prisons. |
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The prisons represent more of a juxtaposition of architectural fragments along breathtaking perspectives than the atrocities of carceral life. |
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And by distributing a new pattern of economic activity over a broad rural area, even while stifling growth, prisons create sprawl. |
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Nearly three fourths of women incarcerated in federal prisons in 1998 were charged with drug offenses. |
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The luckless spy spent most of the war in prisons and internment camps eking out a living as a stool pigeon. |
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Where will the Government put the inmates when all the police cells, court cells, and prisons are full? |
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The country's prisons are so congested that they are prone to disease outbreaks. |
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There were nine prisons officials, armed with 9mm pistols, sub-machine guns and pump action rifles. |
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He stressed that prison overcrowding was the main problem facing all prisons in the country. |
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Under this legislation some men have languished in prisons for almost two years now without charge or trial. |
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Sixteen people have been detained under the Act, all in high security prisons without charge or trial. |
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These may be government-run, but the labour in these prisons can be hired out to corporations. |
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Each chapter deals with a particular aspect of crime, such as highwaymen or hit men, drugs, prisons, and so forth. |
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African-American women who are addicted to illicit substances are disproportionately over-represented in jails, prisons, and treatment programs. |
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Garner is one of twenty thousand prisoners held in supermax prisons in 22 states, the District of Columbia and at a federal supermax in Colorado. |
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There are thousands of dangerous prisoners being held securely behind bars in supermax prisons across the United States. |
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These prisons, popularly known as a supermaxes, have been the target of prisoner lawsuits in Wisconsin, Ohio, Virginia, and Illinois. |
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Modern prisons are modelled after John Stuart Mill's panopticon, and sentries can indeed see everything. |
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Foucault's panopticon kept popping into my head, with the concentric circles of observation used for prisons and experiments. |
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More than 200 inmates from prisons across the country will be paroled for anything from a few hours to a week. |
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In Turkish prisons eight people are on hunger strike in protest at prison isolation. |
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Consequently 87 of the 139 prisons in England and Wales are now officially classed as overcrowded. |
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Parties of sightseers would be ferried out to sail round the hulks and see the prisons close up. |
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In the same way that hospitals are the acute end of the healthcare system, prisons should be the acute end of the penal system. |
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Women are the fastest-growing segment of the population in federal penitentiaries and state prisons. |
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Since then, I have been doing this work with 96 state prisons and federal penitentiaries across the United States. |
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It might've come as a surprise to penologists that there are so many empty cells, since the overcrowding of Britain's prisons is legendary. |
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As many have noted, the state of a country's prisons is a telling indicator of its level of civilization. |
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You might think that this isn't a very good analogy, comparing prisons to a commercial passenger jet. |
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Prescribing heroin saves money further down the system in policing, inflated insurance premiums, hospitalisation, and prisons. |
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Some prisons restrict inmates' access to Bibles, or prohibit inmates from having concordances or biblical commentaries. |
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The prisons are hosting more inmates than they were initially built to handle. |
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Whether we believe in capital punishment is beside the point, presumably those running these prisons think it's a fine idea. |
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Soldiers and workers invaded the prisons and released political prisoners as the various factories elected delegates to the Soviet. |
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How widespread was corporal punishment in prisons, and how widespread is corporal punishment in schools? |
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Its prisons and correction facilities release convicted criminals when they have served their sentence. |
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They were also having to use potties in front of each other, a situation found in some other prisons, and which we branded disgraceful. |
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Fearing counter-revolution, the sans-culottes destroyed prisons because they believed they were secretly sheltering conspirators. |
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Senator Hagan pushed a bill through the legislature putting tighter restrictions on for-profit prisons. |
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The frank realism of his writing devolves from his experience working with violence prevention in prisons and schools in New York. |
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The result will be more prisons full with thousands of young working class people. |
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We are committed to creating a culture of respect and decency within prisons both for staff and prisoners. |
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The number of people serving life sentences in British prisons, revealed by the Prison Reform Trust. |
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I had been in local prisons, but then I landed up in prison far away from my own home. |
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Texas, the leader in prisons and capital punishment nationwide, had 534,260 on parole or probation. |
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Prisoners in high security prisons are routinely subject to strip searches. |
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The significance of this duty to those detained in prison, not least where prisons are crowded and prisoners often dangerous, is obvious. |
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They are in prison surrounded by people, but prisons are the loneliest places on earth. |
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Relatively more mentally ill people end up in prisons as the prison population diminishes. |
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Taken prisoner, he was jailed and as a POW served time in Wakefield and Frongoch prisons. |
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He worked in all but one of the prisons in Northern Ireland as a prison officer and a physical education instructor. |
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The prisons systems would be emptied and the borders demilitarized and opened. |
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Emotional and psychological suffering in prisons is deliberately inflicted. |
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After retirement he was visiting psychotherapist at Dartmoor and Exeter prisons. |
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Though repeatedly tortured, he was one of the few desaparecidos to return alive from the country's secret prisons. |
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Politicians have been warned repeatedly that overpopulated prisons cannot deal adequately with depressed, despairing inmates. |
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In recent years, prisons have become popular tourist destinations in parts of Asia. |
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In Finland the reason given for the creation of a detention centre has been that immigrants should not be placed in prisons. |
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Right now my research is taking the form of looking into the gross human-rights abuses in our prison system, particularly women's prisons. |
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Both were dishonourably discharged from National Service in 1954 after spending much of their time in military prisons. |
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Many view nursing homes with the same distaste as prisons and vow to avoid them at all costs. |
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What goes on inside the CIA facilities, closer to medieval dungeons than modern prisons, can only be guessed at. |
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One level above the watery dock were the prisons, or dungeons, where in times of old, only true criminals were held. |
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It tells the story of a 1946 escape attempt from that most infamous of prisons, Alcatraz. |
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Ray and Max are part of an underground scheme set up to create new lives in Canada for escapees from these prisons. |
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He has supported open prisons and opposed unnecessarily draconian anti-terrorism laws. |
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Her subject is Los Angeles itself, and it's a familiarly distressing collage of crime-scene tape, drive-bys, bulging prisons, drug stunted lives. |
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But too often, he appears to be making up crime policy on the hoof, like his decision today to release hundreds of criminals early because the prisons are full. |
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The thousands of offenders released each year from Colorado prisons cannot be treated as an homogeneous group nor assisted in a standardized manner. |
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These include habitats where vermin, reptiles or insects gather and, according to Al Biruni, deserted places, prisons and places of grief and mourning. |
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The only exceptions would be residential premises like care homes, hospices, prisons and private members' clubs, where members would hold an annual ballot on allowing smoking. |
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The first prisons were therefore the local lock-up or the castle keep. |
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The Shadow Police and Emergency Services Minister, Kim Wells, says the government has done little to relieve overcrowding in police lock-ups and the state's prisons. |
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Disease cases and death rates among inmates in prisons and other correctional institutions are often ten times higher than in the general population. |
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The poorhouses and the debtors' prisons have long since closed. |
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She has visited scores of penal facilities in Latin America and the United States, including over thirty prisons, jails, and police lock-ups in Brazil. |
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Moreover, America's prisons are creating an entire class of ex-cons who have that much harder a time afterwards finding jobs that are willing to pay them competitive wages. |
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The others, spared this fate, returned from their prisons and camps in the spring of 1956 as part of the de-Stalinization campaign that began under Khrushchev. |
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There were no doubters in the prisons and gulags, where dissidents spread the news, tapping to each other in code what the American President had dared to say. |
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Work in British prisons has too often involved sewing mailbags. |
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A visiting nut-job from the USA tells us to close down all prisons. |
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Yet clause 206 recognises that the Government is prepared to give those coercive powers to the private sector to transport prisoners between courthouses and prisons. |
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Cayley's book was written at a time when the rehabilitative theory and practice of prisons, parole and other measures were under attack from the right. |
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As prisons go, it is rather tame, and warden Kevin Jones likes it that way. |
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The death and torture camps, barbaric prisons for political opponents and routine beatings for anyone suspected of disloyalty are well documented. |
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The accusations include several attacks on various prisons, including a 2011 jailbreak in which Morsi escaped. |
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These texts, in part as a result of this Gnostic foundation, contain speakers whose disembodied voices we hear through the walls of their prisons. |
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In a country nearly crushed by poverty and joblessness, there is little money left over for making the prisons humane and livable. |
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One in four women in local prisons self-harms, some repeatedly. |
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Transportation to Australia or incarceration in one of the new penitentiary prisons became the standard punishment for serious, non-homicidal offenders. |
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After the truce in 1988, Khomeini issued a secret fatwa ordering that all MEK supporters in Iranian prisons should be killed. |
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That means it will fall under the beady eye of the chief inspector, whose remit is to provide an impartial and independent view of conditions in all of Scotland's prisons. |
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Because it was beyond the control of the authorities in the City of London, the region attracted radicals, religious dissidents, prisons, brothels, and bear pits. |
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In Poland, Lithuania, and Romania, the CIA operated secret prisons, according to the investigation. |
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There are about 10,000 beneficed clergy working whole-time for the Church, and a rather larger number unpaid, retired or working as chaplains in prisons, hospitals and so on. |
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In southwestern Pennsylvania, four rural townships in Somerset, Indiana and Greene counties are hosts to new prisons built within the last few years. |
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Conjugal visits are allowed in Peruvian prisons if couples register as common-law partners, as the two lovebirds are. |
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We performed in schools, old peoples homes, borstals and prisons. |
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Gradually, the pagan and sexual passions the moon inspires demonstrate that these inhibitive prisons cannot prevent the transgressive mingling of sacred and profane love. |
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These deplorable conditions existed in military prisons of both sides. |
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And from their power structure within the prisons they manipulate and control events on the streets. |
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It is difficult to believe that such considerations will bear fruit, however, meaning that forced deportations and prisons for deportees will receive approval. |
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But behind the doors of prisons and juvenile halls, in the rooms of foster care group homes, are people who need us. |
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Indeed, this promise gave the prisons or penitentiaries, as they were now often called, enormous legitimacy, making them the pride, not the shame, of the new republic. |
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Conditions were crowded and unsanitary, and many died in these prisons. |
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Most prisons issue incident reports on a sliding scale from 100 series to 400 series. |
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It has an enormous dose of estrogen in it, leading to many voluptuous prisoners in New York state prisons. |
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Thank God it will soon be evacuated and replaced by two new prisons, sci Phoenix I and II, just next door. |
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But my own expertise is in American prisons, where obesity is actually a problem. |
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Although some are believed to have escaped during the process of arrest, an unknown number absconded during transfers between prisons, police stations and courts. |
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Some jails and prisons allow the guards to carry chemical spray and a baton, some of them insist that there's nothing at all in reach of the inmates. |
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There is need to erect open air prisons to decongest the current ones. |
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Most recipes involve fresh fruit and wardens at some prisons have went so far as to ban fruit from prisoners' meals in hopes of curtailing production. |
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Legend has it that wardens of some federal prisons kept a picture of Alcatraz in their offices as a warning to troublesome inmates of the price of misbehavior. |
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This was a daily situation where people were being warehoused in prisons. |
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Well for example, people will argue on the outside that prisons are for either rehabilitation, or punishment or just warehousing them so they're not on the streets. |
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This is not an exception, all the prisons in the country has more remand prisoners than convict prisoners because of the delay in dispensation of justice. |
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We performed in schools, old people's homes, borstals and prisons. |
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But if prisons are better equipped to handle suicide, then how could the correctional Reception Center have missed Castro? |
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He implemented the program, oversaw it, and defended it, to say nothing of the secret prisons, which he also directed. |
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The dispensers of justice down in Clifford Street can now talk directly via a TV link to prisons all over the country from Exeter to Durham and from Strangeways to Wandsworth. |
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The dispute between management and doctors has been dragging on for a number of years, since a review of medical services within the State's prisons. |
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Funding for prisons has continued to increase in the past two decades, while the percentage of the state budget spent on higher education is going down, the study said. |
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His views on private prisons may not have sat comfortably with the Executive but it would be very sad if they were not reappointing him because they feared his impartiality. |
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There are around 30,000 detainees in prisons without charge or trial. |
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But Lundbeck, the Danish maker of Nembutal, no longer sells the drug to U.S. prisons. |
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He also announced a crackdown on bonded labor and said his government will ban indiscriminate use of fetters in prisons and while producing prisoners in courts. |
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It was through this work that Bensoussan discovered there was a demand for ministers to perform weddings at jails and prisons. |
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We have all heard the stories about what prisons are like, I don't believe in prison being a totally horrific place, but I do think it has to be a bit more of a deterrent. |
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In minimum-security prisons, like the camp in Florence, Colorado where I currently am confined, racial tensions tend to dissipate, if not disappear. |
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Except, of course, nobody is intending to shut the prisons down. |
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They dream away their twilights now in prisons for the aged. |
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When I last had statistics, there were 3,600 lifers in our prisons. |
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Adults who are severely mentally ill are over-represented in U.S. jails and prisons, leading to an interface between the mental health and criminal justice systems. |
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When the central government allocates resources, it does so on the basis of what the prisons can do for themselves, bearing in mind their access to raw materials and markets. |
|
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Even Rachel Maddow, who wrote her doctoral thesis on AIDS reform in prisons, seemed surprised by the seemingly magnanimous move. |
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Why will we now have single officers on duty alone at night in prisons? |
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These children are languishing in prisons with no one fighting for their rights, and we want to give them a voice and make sure that their rights are upheld. |
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People who have been in prison and who visit prisons will be with us. |
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We see the effects of a state that spends more money per capita on prisons than it does on education. |
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The ministry responsible for health care in prisons is usually not the ministry of health for example, the ministry of justice or the ministry of interior. |
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In the US the prisons are full of druggers and petty thieves. |
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According to the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the majority of inmates held in federal prisons are convicted of drug offenses. |
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They are the keepers of the local parish prisons, which house felony and misdemeanor prisoners. |
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The rate of 118 is for sentenced prisoners in 2015 in Ministry of Justice prisons only. |
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In 2004, the Prison Service was responsible for 130 prisons and employed around 44,000 staff. |
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As of 2009 the number of prisons had increased to 131, including 11 privately owned prisons. |
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Six new reform prisons are to be built with prison governors in charge of operation and budget. |
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The Chief Inspector of prisons claims English and Welsh prisons have become unacceptably violent and dangerous. |
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It runs four prisons, a Young Offenders Institution and a Secure Training Centre. |
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However, those draft resisters who refused any cooperation with the war effort often spent much of each war in federal prisons. |
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The condition of early prisons in Wales was rudimentary and with few amenities for the imprisoned. |
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The hunger strikes at Turkey's prisons are over,'' proclaimed negotiator Mukadder Basegmez, an Istanbul lawmaker. |
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During his governorship, Bush oversaw the construction of 38 prisons. |
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The smaller prisons and jails across the country were closed and the location of the prisons centralised. |
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Until 2017 there was no provision for convicts in northern Wales, with prisoners sent to prisons in Liverpool and further afield. |
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Lobster was also commonly served in prisons, much to the displeasure of inmates. |
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After that, about 56,000 of the 409,000 POWs died in prisons during the war, accounting for nearly 10 percent of the conflict's fatalities. |
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Either that or we turf the criminals into the squaddies' accommodation and let them move into our all mod con prisons. |
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Reports on the pitiful state of many prisons have finally percolated through to the Home Office, which has promised to look into the situation. |
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The prisons gym department also provides physical education courses as well as recreational gym. |
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Parkhurst prison is one of the two prisons that make up HMP Isle of Wight, the other being Albany. |
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The two former prisons along with Camp Hill were merged in 2009 and each site still retained its old name. |
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Across the three sites there were nearly 1,700 prisoners making it one of the largest prisons in the country. |
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Norwegian prisons are humane, rather than tough, with emphasis on rehabilitation. |
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There are 17 prisons in departmental capital cities and 36 provincial prisons. |
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Official recognition of this phenomenon led to executions being carried out inside prisons, away from public view. |
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Often, specific regulations on strike actions exist for employees in prisons. |
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The Federal Bureau of Prisons maintains 17 federal prisons and two affiliated private facilities in the region. |
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The Federal Department of Corrections added them in 2005 to two prisons in Coleman, Fla. |
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Strip-searches may be routine for those working in jails and prisons but they are not routine for courts. |
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Though prisons add to gross domestic product, they may substract from the general welfare of the nation. |
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For more information on Pollsmoor prison, and other prisons in Africa, see Jeremy Sarkin, ed. |
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He wants to change the system for the benefit of all and wants to stop the incredible rorting that has occurred within the prisons system. |
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He then set up the Vinnytsia Human Rights group, which helped refugees and fought against abuse and torture in prisons. |
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His disregard for the law put him in prisons across Italy and Malta. |
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Prison education budgets were placed in the hands of prison governors who could vire money to other areas of the prisons. |
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Many studies also have been conducted in jails and prisons examining health problems and the use of health services. |
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As prisons continue to corporatize their mandates, innovative strategies of surveillance and criminalization are required. |
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We're well beyond the idea that prisons should be the Victorian hellholes they once were. |
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Many US embassies are built like prisons, devoid of character. |
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Each sheriff had his own compter, which were both prisons and offices, administered by the respective secondaries. |
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The country's overcrowded and drug-ridden prisons will be reviewed by an independent board of inquiry. |
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The U.S. military had hoped to farm out the Bagram detainees to prisons run by Afghanistan and other nations. |
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Her Majesty's Prison Service, reporting to the Ministry of Justice, manages most prisons, housing over 85,000 convicts. |
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Her Majesty's Prison Service, which reports to the Ministry of Justice, manages most of the prisons within England and Wales. |
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Norwegian prisons are humane rather than tough with emphasis on rehabilitation. |
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Elizabeth spent her time between different prisons, including the Tower of London. |
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Priests also serve as chaplains of hospitals, schools, prisons, and in the armed forces. |
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Nick Clegg claims prisons have become large, overcrowded, dangerous and ineffective. |
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Phil Wheatley blamed budget cuts and excessive changes in government policy for the state of prisons. |
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Managing prisons is a difficult and highly skilled task that requires adequate resourcing and a stable policy environment. |
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The prison estate certainly needs an overhaul, but reducing demand would mean closing prisons, not opening them. |
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Lord Woolf following the 1990 Strangeways Prison riot advised prisons should normally hold at most 400 prisoners. |
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Mobile phones are smuggled into prisons and prisoners use them to plot crimes. |
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In addition, three prisons that were built with public money are managed by private companies under contract. |
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Old prisons are also more expensive to run and do not facilitate rehabilitation of prisoners. |
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The Tower was often a safer place than other prisons in London such as the Fleet, where disease was rife. |
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Sometimes a motte covered an older castle or hall, whose rooms became underground storage areas and prisons beneath a new keep. |
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Wright, although placed under house arrest on the orders of Lord Burghley, was permitted to minister to the inmates of London prisons. |
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The Commune sent gangs of National Guardsmen and fereres into the prisons to kill 10 or more victims, mostly nonjuring priests. |
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The privatization of prisons and prison services which began in the 1980s has been a subject of debate. |
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Additionally, there was a lack of regulation in prisons where captured traffickers were sent. |
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During this time, thousands of Germans were held in prisons and detention camps or used as forced labour. |
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Large scale resignations of psychiatrists are feared mainly due to safety concerns as in some prisons there will be only one staff member to 50 inmates. |
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The Prison Service does not manage all prisons within England and Wales. |
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Private prisons are subject to scrutiny by Her Majesty's Chief Inspector of Prisons in a similar manner to prisons run by the public Prison Service. |
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The ministry has no responsibility for devolved criminal justice policy, courts, prisons or probation matters in either Scotland or Northern Ireland. |
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Another batch of six prisoners was released in December, only to be secretly transferred to Pakistani prisons and held incommunicado for several weeks. |
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An underground effort by Poles to continue to teach children immediately emerged, with those caught punished by being sent to concentration camps or prisons. |
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The mob broke into prisons and destroyed several buildings, including the palace of the Bishop of Bristol, the mansion of the Lord Mayor of Bristol, and several private homes. |
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In November 2015 the Ministry of Justice confirmed that, as part of a major programme to replace older prisons, it would not renew its lease on the prison. |
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Wilde wrote two long letters to the editor of the Daily Chronicle, describing the brutal conditions of English prisons and advocating penal reform. |
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In the 18th century several buildings began taking on the function of modern prisons, and in 1878 Welsh prisons came under centralised government control. |
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The earliest forms of prisons, which began appearing in the early modern period, were created for the purposes of holding those awaiting trial and to house debtors. |
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From the 18th century the institutions that would begin to have the function of modern prisons began to appear in Aberystwyth, Bangor and Beaumaris. |
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In Haitian prisons, deportees have suffered from a lack of basic hygiene, nutrition and health care, and from outbreaks of diseases like beriberi and cholera. |
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Twenty-four states have laws against assault with a bodily fluid in prisons, said Nicole Dewing, legislative coordinator with the Vermont State Employees' Association. |
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It had started organising peaceful protests in prisons across England. |
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Britain, which has not experienced a helicopter escape since the late 1970s, has been more aggressive about installing antihelicopter nets in its prisons. |
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Today's blackenization, if you will, of the prisons only exacerbates racist proclivities in nonblack Americans to associate black people with wrong. |
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Scotland's prisons are overcrowded but the prison population is shrinking. |
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The sickness is Islamofascist cancer, which has been allowed to metastasize in the banlieues, prisons, mosques, associations, schools and even universities. |
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Some critics of the new Poor Law noted the similarities between Kempthorne's plans and model prisons, and doubted that they were merely coincidental. |
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Hunger strikes are often used in prisons as a form of political protest. |
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Corrupt prison officers smuggle illegal drugs and mobile into prisons. |
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Prisons are never happy places, and places of prolonged, extrajudicial detention and torture seem to retain their edge for a very long time. |
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After the war he became a prison warder and served in Mountjoy and Portlaoise Prisons. |
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Prisons can save money by buying in bulk from producers with surplus goods. |
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Prisons are designed to transform a regretted crime into contrite behavior through penalties and punishment. |
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Two weeks ago the Chief Inspector of Prisons told prison officers to remove charity tiepins bearing the cross of St George as these might be considered racist. |
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A sergeant from the directorate General of Prisons, Mina Olmedo, was shot and killed, and eleven other guards were badly injured. |
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They say the Department of Justice, the parent agency of the bureau of Prisons, has reimbursed Treasury for those costs. |
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Prisons are notoriously tightlipped when it comes to negative publicity, and officials often act with a swaggering confidence. |
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In his 1777 work State of the Prisons prison reformer John Howard mentions two Welsh jails, Caernarfon county jail and Swansea town jail. |
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