Sentences with phrase «culture of punishment»

«The legitimacy of prison regimes risk being undermined by low staffing levels, new mean and petty restrictions and a developing culture of punishment without purpose,» Mark Day of the Prison Reform Trust wrote in an article for Monitor magazine.
They don't create a culture of punishment for mistakes.

Not exact matches

Unfortunately, our culture has made a habit out of calling fitness and exercise a punishment for our dietary decisions.
The converse worry is that a corporate culture emphasizing ethical values may find employees engaging in well meaning activity that may inadvertently expose the company to legal liability or punishment for failing to observe the often arcane, technical requirements of the law.
Legalistic cultures may be corrosive of creating or maintaining a values - based corporate culture — one in which a company's norms and practices reflect a commitment to ethical values greater than merely avoiding legal liability or punishment.
The religious conservatives, beset by this sea change in the secular culture, might have been expected to retrench into their conventional media stereotypes: authoritarian, emotionally uninvolved husbands and fathers, a rigidly patriarchal family style, deeply gendered domestic roles that kept women at home» plus, as Wilcox puts it, «high levels of corporal punishment and domestic violence.»
Rehabilitation here means not that of individual criminals but of entire societies that have suffered war or dictatorship, as when supporters of international tribunals describe punishment as «overcoming a culture of impunity.»
The Gospel of life is hard to preach in a culture of death, but eliminating capital punishment is one thing that may help.
* worship God, who has never been, at any time for any reason, a capricious God of death, war, murder, destruction, violence, abuse, vengeance, hate, fear, lies, slavery, systemic injustice, oppression, conditional acceptance, exclusion, segregation, discrimination, shunning, ostracism, eternal condemnation, eternal punishment, retribution, sacrifices, patriarchy, matriarchy, empire, nationalism, only one culture, only one race or portion of the population, parochialism, sectarianism, dogma, creeds, pledges, oaths or censorship — and who has never behaved as a Greco - Roman or narcissistic deity.
It's not the ideal of sexual purity, per se, that causes these challenges, but purity culture, a social system of norms, rewards, and punishments that presents perfection as the sole ideal.
God in His will through history had into reality seemingly illogical or cruel events to happen in our world, but no one is spared if the purpose is for the good of humanity, wars pestilence even the holocust has a reason and purpose beyond our comprehension at our times but will be reveald in the future, The Phillipine catasthrophy for example is viewed by some as Gods punishment, we experienced the brunt of natures punishing power but it also unveiled the true feelings and concern of the whole world in helping us materially and spiiritually by aiding and consoling us that was unprecedented in history, The whole world had demostrated, to me, a kind of humanitarian concern and love that trancends races and culture, A kind of demonstration by higher being the we humans is one with Him.The cost of human lives and misery is nothing in history compared to its positve historical consequences
But you're right about Leviticus containing some pretty severe punishments for stuff we do every day as a matter of course in our culture... the punishment for adultery was stoning, if I remember correctly.
He saw how the values of a culture, as these are incarnated in the attitudes and behavior of parents, are internalized by children as they experience these values in the rewards punishment, praise - blame responses of their parents.
Young children automatically learn the implicit rules of their culture as these are reflected in their parents» pattern of approval and punishment.
Children were removed from their homes, put in to Residential schools where they were horribly abused, forced to leave the beliefs behind for fear of severe punishment at the hands of their christian masters, forced to lose their Native Tongue... all in some warped vision to tear down a culture and destroy it.
Why, we men have learned, indeed experience teaches, that when there is a mutiny aboard ship or in an army, the guilty are so numerous that the punishment can not be applied; and when it is a question of the public, «the highly respected cultured public,» then not only is there no crime, but, according to the newspapers, upon which one can rely as upon the Gospel or divine revelation, this is the will of God.
The conscience of a child is formed as he internalizes the values and taboos of his culture which are screened through the praise - blame, reward - punishment systems of his parents.
Unless he comes from a culture in which infant mortality is so high that it is traditional to wait until a child is born to hold a shower, I can only conclude that his unwillingness is a form of punishment.
Even if my pleas to erase all aspects of punishment from how we understand «discipline» for our children, including avoiding the imposition of losses in emotional safety like what is caused by a timeout, take a little longer for the broader culture to understand, can we at least start with an understanding that we need to stop hitting the children?
One of major punishments in Amish culture is shunning.
The office of Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan, released its findings in a graphic 79 - page report that described a «deep - seated culture of violence» against youthful inmates at the jail complex, perpetrated by guards who operated with little fear of punishment.
«Maybe the publicity - friendly strategy is also because Bharara suspects he won't have the facts to send anyone to jail — and that to truly change the culture of state government, punishment is less effective than embarrassment, anyway.»
The present study shows that Gächter's previous conclusion that punishment was detrimental «was an experimental artifact generated by a relatively small number of interactions,» says anthropologist Rob Boyd of the University of California, Los Angeles, who studies the mechanisms that shape human culture.
Unfortunately, our culture has made a habit out of calling fitness and exercise a punishment for our dietary decisions.
All of us must to work together to replace cycles of trauma and punishment if we hope to build a culture of health and learning.
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This shift in practice will result in a culture which is inclusive, builds fair process into decision - making practices, and facilitates learning to address the impact of one's actions through a relational restorative approach as opposed to focusing on rule breaking and punishments.
The report's school accountability approach emphasizes two equally important goals for these new systems: 1) ensuring that accountability systems drive toward equal education opportunities by creating a system for identifying and acting on chronic low performance by particular groups of students and 2) ensuring that accountability systems are broadly framed in order to drive toward a comprehensive conception of student and school success and a culture of continuous improvement rather than just shame and punishment.
The DSC brings together parents, youth, advocates and educators to support alternatives to a culture of zero - tolerance, punishment and removal in our schools.
But his delusions during his Cotard's episode, which happened decades later, were not about syphilis but HIV / AIDS — which had supplanted syphilis in the broader culture as «God's punishment for sins of the flesh» (syphilis almost never shows up anymore during hypochondriac delusions in Cotard's).
Posted by Zoe Tillman on September 13, 2012 at 01:32 PM in Crime and Punishment, Current Affairs, D.C. Courts and Government, Justice Department, Miscellany, Points of View, Politics and Government, Society and Culture Permalink
Posted by Zoe Tillman on October 24, 2012 at 01:33 PM in Crime and Punishment, Current Affairs, D.C. Courts and Government, Justice Department, Miscellany, Points of View, Politics and Government, Society and Culture Permalink
A junior lawyer rebuked for forging documents has been spared more severe punishment after she laid bare the «culture of fear» she says she experienced at work.
Among his books were Public and Private Persons: The Ontario Political Culture, 1914 - 1934, which Clarke, Irwin published in 1975, G. Howard Ferguson, Ontario Tory, published by the University of Toronto Press in 1977, a life of Allan Grossman, entitled Unlikely Tory which Lester & Orpen Dennys published in 1985, and the definitive work on 19th Century penology in Ontario, «Terror to Evil - Doers»: Prisons and Punishments in Nineteenth - Century Ontario.
Such differences in findings for African American compared to European American families have led to the hypothesis that the meaning of corporal punishment varies by culture (Deater - Decker et al., 1996, Deater - Decker & Dodge, 1997; Whaley, 2000).
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Finally, a study of corporal punishment in 6 cultures (China, India, Italy, Kenya, Philippines, and Thailand) found that physical discipline was always linked with increased child aggression and anxiety.
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