Should criminals be punished with lengthy jail terms or re-educated and rehabilitated, using community service programs,taught meditation,given vocational training,moral education,etc., before being reintroduced to society?
Should criminals be punished with lengthy jail terms or re-educated and rehabilitated, using community service programs,taught meditation,given vocational training,moral education,etc., before being reintroduced to society?
@ jogeshwar
if these ways of changing the mindset and thought patterns of criminals are devised,the professionals can be arranged who deal exclusively with such people....
however i asked smth. else .i asked if punishment is more effective or these ways...u dint reply to this thing specifically
Sameer Sharma (Advocate) 07 September 2010
The scenario does have a light at the end of the tunnel.
Education is one of the ways in which this positive change was affected. Education works in two levels to successfully rehabilitate the criminal. On a macro level, society as a whole is being educated to promote the importance of keeping the laws as well as ensuring that there is less discrimination against former criminals. This ensures that there propensity for ex-convicts to return to a life of crime is less, as they are able to secure jobs after their release. Education is also being offered within the prison to allow the prisoners to upgrade and stay relevant to the changing society outside the prison walls.
In criminal rehabilitation, prisoners are given opportunity to increase their content knowledge base. This is essential as studies show that many inmates do not have basic grade school education. This would severely impede their success of acquiring jobs, thus many had to turn to a life of crime. Basic criminal rehabilitation programs ensure that there is a standard level of literacy amongst the inmates who sign up for the course.
The project "Social and Psychological Rehabilitation of Criminals", which was developed by the Penitentiary Committee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, started in the Republic of Belarus. The realization of the new project is carried out with the organizational and financial support of the UN Development Program in Belarus.
The experts working in the laboratory will have to make their contribution to the development of the methods of social and psychological rehabilitation of former prisoners on the basis of existing experience in this field.
H . Barnes wrote :
"The diagnosis and treatment of the criminal is a highly technical medical and sociological problem for which the lawyer is rarely any better fitted than a real estate agent or a plumber. We shall ultimately come to admit that society has been unfortunate in handing over criminals to lawyers and judges in the past as it once was in entrusting medicine to shamans and astrologers, and surgery to barbers. A hundred years ago we allowed lawyers and judges to have the same control of the insane classes as they still exert over the criminal groups, but we now recognize that insanity is a highly diversified and complex medical problem which we entrust to properly trained experts in the field of neurology and psychiatry. We may hope that in another hundred years the treatment of the criminal will be equally thoroughly and willingly submitted to medical and sociological experts."
Sameer Sharma (Advocate) 07 September 2010
More positive efforts are needed to make the man whole, and this takes us to the domain of mind culture. Modern scientific studies have validated ancient vedic insights bequeathing to mankind new meditationa. yogic and other therapeutics, at once secular, empirically tested and trans-religious. The psychological, physiologic and sociological experiments conducted on the effects of Transcendental Meditation (TM, for short) have proved that this science of creative intelligence, in its meditational applications, transquillises the tense inside, helps meet stress without distress, overcome inactivations and instabilities and by holistic healing normalises the severed and fatigued man. Rehabilitation of psychatric patients, restoration of juvenile offenders, augmentation of moral tone and temper and, more importantly, improvement of social behaviour of prisoners are among the proven findings recorded by researchers. Extensive studies of TM in many prisons in the U.S.A. Canada, Germany and other countries are reported to have yielded results of improved creativity, higher responsibility and better behaviour. Indeed, a few trial courts in the, United States have actually prescribed(1) TM as a recipe for rehabilitation. As Dr. M. P. Pai, Principal of the Kasturba Medical College, Mangalore, has put down -
"Meditation is a science and this should be learnt under guidance and cannot be just picked up from books. Objective studies on the effects of meditation on human body and mind is a modern observation and has been studied by various investigation at MERU- Maharishi European Research University. Its tranquillising effect on body and mind, ultimately leading to he greater goal of Cosmic Consciousness or universal awareness, has been studied by using over a hundred parameters. Transcendental Meditation practised for 15 minutes in the morning and evening every day brings about a host of beneficial effects. To name only a few :
1. Body and mind gets into a state of deep relaxation.
2. -B. M. R. drops, less oxygen is consumed.
3. E.E.G. shows brain wave coherence with 'alpha' wave preponderance.
4. Automatic stability increases.
5. Normalisation of high blood pressure.
6. Reduced use of alcohol and tobacco.
7. Reduced stress, hence decreased plasma cortisol and blood lactate.
8. Slowing of the heart etc.
An Article on TM and the Criminal Justice System in the Kentucky Law Journal and another one in the Maryland Law Forum highlight the potency of TM in the field of criminal rehabilitation (Kentucky L. J. Vol. 60, 1971-72 No. 2; and University of Maryland Law Forum, Vol. 111, No. 2, Winter 1973). There is no reason, prima facie, if TM physiologically produces a deep state of restful alertness which rejuvenates and normalises the functioning of the nervous system.
Can we be back to the question of Narad to Ratnakar-For whom are you committing crime?
As long as it is for self the technology you presented will work but when it is for invisible BIG BOSSES I do not think your technology will work.
LOL. I too was at you stage of realization, that is, away from reality. Trust, sooner or later reality will touch you.
Daksh (Student) 07 September 2010
Dear Sameer,
I really appreciate your line of thought and the way you have presented it. Kudos for your fantabulous post.
God bless - keep up the good work going.
Best Regards
Daksh
By any chance did yoou visit 'crimetimes.org' ?
By any chance did you go through any issue of 'International Journal of comparative criminology and offender therapy'?
N.K.Assumi (Advocate) 08 September 2010