The outcome of the Tyrer case was that the practice of corporal punishment as a penalty for criminal offenders in the Isle of Man was abandoned. |
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But I'm not sure I agree with police being able to administer corporal punishment! |
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A survey of more than 1,530 workers found that such regimentation was widespread, as was the use of corporal punishment. |
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Now I am a strict follower of this rule about no corporal punishment whatsoever. |
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Somewhat of a hellion, Watts was held in check by his tight-knit community and his father's penchant for corporal punishment. |
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Since the government banned corporal punishment in schools, teachers think they cannot discipline the children. |
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If anything, I called for the reinstatement of teachers' powers to discipline students, including the administering of corporal punishment. |
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Oklahoma school administrators say that while corporal punishment remains legal in the state, they rarely reach for the paddle. |
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The experts all agreed that corporal punishment that results in injury is child abuse. |
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More than 90 countries worldwide have abolished corporal punishment in schools and penal systems for youth. |
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One of the most common allegations relates to physical abuse and excessive corporal punishment. |
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In both, a civil action had been brought against a teacher who had administered corporal punishment. |
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Gurudeva also required a home life of ahimsa, tolerating neither abuse of a spouse nor corporal punishment of children. |
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I think the lack of corporal punishment is a contributory factor to this lawlessness. |
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The very nature of judicial corporal punishment is that it involves one human being inflicting physical violence on another human being. |
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One of the most common allegations relates to physical abuse and extreme or excessive corporal punishment. |
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Restore corporal punishment in schools solely for serious bullying, physical assault and wanton serious damage to property. |
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Therefore, it was the firm opinion of the Committee that corporal punishment constitutes cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment. |
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Thus, by declining to tell parents that they cannot hit their children, the state sanctions their corporal punishment. |
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These branks and the stocks are examples of implements of corporal punishment used in early modern Glasgow. |
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The party's annual conference voted decisively to extend the present ban on corporal punishment in schools to family life. |
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How widespread was corporal punishment in prisons, and how widespread is corporal punishment in schools? |
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Boys are the primary victims of corporal punishment and other types of physical abuse, both at home and in school. |
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The British attorney general, Lord Goldsmith, confirmed that a total ban on corporal punishment would criminalise even a mild smack. |
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Committee members attacked Australian law, which permits corporal punishment within families and at private schools. |
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The new law will prevent registered childminders from smacking or using any form of corporal punishment against children under eight. |
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Opponents of corporal punishment argue that frequent physical punishment interferes with the teaching of nonviolent modes of conflict resolution. |
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The government needs to forget the new smacking law and bring back corporal punishment. |
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If I can draw on my own experience as a child, the threat of corporal punishment always loomed larger than the punishment itself. |
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Moreover a man is required by divine and positive law to submit to corporal punishment if he cannot pay the forfeit for any act he has committed. |
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He was a strict disciplinarian and a firm believer in corporal punishment. |
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It should take the necessary legislative measures to prohibit corporal punishment of children in the family. |
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A study of the effects of corporal punishment in one Caribbean locale found a modest, direct relationship between physical punishment and psychological adjustment. |
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By the end of his life, the memories of corporal punishment at the hands of his teachers were vivid. |
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Article 19 and article 28, paragraph 2, do not refer explicitly to corporal punishment. |
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Similarly, unlike many of their continental European neighbours, the English clung to corporal punishment as a penal sanction until well into the twentieth century. |
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I am not condoning corporal punishment but some sympathy must go out to the teacher whose patience must have been taxed to the limit and which seems to have snapped. |
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Children as young as 14 are also working illegally, while minor workplace misdemeanours are frequently met with corporal punishment or punitive wage reductions. |
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Although the Department went through the motions of investigating complaints, its commitment to enforcing the corporal punishment regulations was half-hearted at best. |
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And the old English common law treated the servant as a member of the family and that's why the master could administer corporal punishment for example. |
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We may note that under the regulations governing the operations of these institutions, all forms of corporal punishment or abuse are prohibited. |
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An angry deputy head said striking a prefect was a terrible thing and that if corporal punishment hadn't been banned, our victim would have been caned. |
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Many children are also still subject to corporal punishment, though the practice is banned in schools. |
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It should be noted, however, that corporal punishment should be instituted as a last resort. |
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He is a highly intelligent and well educated man, therefore there can be no doubt he knew how both society and the law view the use of corporal punishment. |
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The European Revised Social Charter requires EU states to ban all forms of corporal punishment and any other forms of degrading treatment of children. |
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Minors who have committed petty offences can be sentenced to several years of imprisonment or corporal punishment. |
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This section prohibits the use of corporal punishment as a disciplinary sanction. |
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Coerciveness has long been used for social control in rituals such as union blackballing, college hazing, excommunication and corporal punishment. |
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The regulated use of corporal punishment was an acceptable mode of discipline. |
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At common law teachers are in loco parentis and may administer corporal punishment in respect of the conduct of the child at, or on its way to or from school. |
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It was, moreover, proud to be among those States that had banned corporal punishment. |
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And he used to administer corporal punishment every morning to the boys. |
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Moreover, corporal punishment has the undesirable quality that the more you use it, the less effective it becomes. |
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What we are talking about here is not the premeditated corporal punishment of strapping that used to occur in schools. |
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One of the allegations was that an educator was still using corporal punishment and had recently assaulted learners by slapping and punching them. |
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In 1885 corporal punishment was included in section four of the Criminal Law Amendment Act as the penalty for a sexual assault on a girl under thirteen years of age. |
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The mission received reports that maltreatment and corporal punishment, which were frequent just a few months ago, have stopped. |
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No harsh or inhumane treatment coercion or corporal punishment of any kind is tolerated, nor is there to be the threat of any such treatment. |
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Further, we are not aware of any broad groundswell of public opinion favoring the revival of corporal punishment. |
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They don't have corporal punishment anymore. |
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China has always attached great importance to the protection of the legitimate rights and interests of women in custody and has forbidden abuse, corporal punishment and illtreatment of women in custody. |
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Girls may not be subjected to corporal punishment. |
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I am concerned that those who would seek to deny parents the right to administer corporal punishment to their children would use the ratification of this convention to further their efforts to deny parents this option. |
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In my home country, Sweden, where corporal punishment is banned, every child at nursery school and all young people know that adults may not strike a child. |
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The delegation might also indicate whether a law prohibited corporal punishment at school and at home, and whether it was aware of the use of that practice in Liechtenstein. |
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School regulations abolished corporal punishment in schools. |
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Dirac's father was strict and authoritarian, although he disapproved of corporal punishment. |
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In particular there was more fasting and an emphasis on corporal punishment. |
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In 1961 she went against the Conservative Party's official position by voting for the restoration of birching as a judicial corporal punishment. |
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Judicial corporal punishment is common in Qatar due to the Hanbali interpretation of Sharia Law. |
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In 1783 for the first time, Poland forbid corporal punishment of children in schools. |
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There are echoes of these darker experiences in Dahl's writings and his hatred of cruelty and corporal punishment. |
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In his final year, as a member of Eton's senior council, he unsuccessfully campaigned for the abolition of corporal punishment at the school. |
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Up to the 17th century the most common punishments for criminal offences were fines, corporal punishment and executions. |
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Communal punishment for wrongdoing generally included compensation by the wrongdoer, corporal punishment, shunning, banishment and execution. |
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Physical or corporal punishment may be imposed such as whipping or caning, although these punishments are prohibited in much of the world. |
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Although unusual in the West, school corporal punishment is common in Mississippi, with 31,236 public school students paddled at least one time. |
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Recidivous thieves, on the other hand, must expect corporal punishment, which is meted out in addition to fines in money or goods. |
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And he didn't halt at corporal punishment. |
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