To combat society's decay and the risks presented by it, Jacksonian penologists designed an institutional setting to remove " deviants " from the corruption of their families and communities.
12.
After each interview, as with Kahler, Wyatt ( 1917 2008 ) discussed each case with a clergyman, psychiatrist or psychologist, an attorney, and a sociologist or a penologist.
13.
In 1992, Edwards appointed the professional penologist, Richard Stalder, as secretary of the Louisiana Department of Public Safety & Corrections, a position that used to be given to political supporters.
14.
Penologists have consequently evolved occupational and psychological education programs for offenders detained in prison, and a range of community service and probation orders which entail guidance and aftercare of the offender within the community.
15.
After 18 technical hearings over a period of six months, the draft decree was presented to a selected group of 369 jurists, penologists, civic leaders and social and behavioral scientists and practitioners.
16.
The idea is that convicts should have to work for the kinds of amenities _ television, weight rooms, conjugal visits _ that reform-minded penologists introduced a generation ago in response to calls for prisoners'rights.
17.
In the 1970s the Governor of Mississippi William L . Waller organized a blue-ribbon committee to study MSP . The committee decided that the state should abandon MSP's for-profit farming system and hire a professional penologist to head the prison.
18.
When the precocious 15-year-old composer Fr�d�ric Chopin visited the Dziewanowski family at Szafarnia, a small village near the river Drwca, he stopped over in ToruD, where he was a guest of his godfather, the penologist Fryderyk Florian Skarbek.
19.
He followed his presentation to the Home Office with a letter to " The Times " ( published 6 October 1982 ) outlining the proposal and his immediate formation of the Offender's Tag Association, composed of electronic scientists, penologists and prominent citizens.
20.
That's what he'll most be remembered for . " With penologist Tom Murton, he wrote " Accomplices to the Crime : The Arkansas Prison Scandal ", a 1969 nonfiction account that was the basis for the 1980 film " Brubaker " starring Robert Redford.