Moral And Ethical Issues In Prison

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Centuries ago, prisons were created to hold criminals in confinement to punish them for the crimes they committed. Prisoners are expected and forced to give up a significant amount of their basic freedoms. The criminal justice system determines the length of which a prisoner is sentenced to be incarcerated. Sentences range depending on the severity of the crime committed. Criminals are expected to give up a majority of their freedoms and privileges once they step inside the concrete walls. Although inmates are expected to live whole new lives in prison, many jails these days are extremely inhumane and the inmates have no basic rights and live in agony. Globally, prisons lack funding and discipline from correctional officers and inmates. Moral and ethical guidelines are often …show more content…

Prisoners are not treated like humans and live in utter corruption. Many of the world’s worst prisons are located in third world countries or communist countries. As Nelson Mandela said, “It is said that no one truly knows a nation until one has been inside its jails. A national shouldn’t be judged by how it treats its highest citizens, but its lowest ones.” Underdeveloped countries do not have the funding or time to spend trying to fix their jails, so often they go unruly with no control over the actions and events that take place within them. The majority of the worst jails in the world are located in foreign, very poor countries. In some prisons, inmates are forced to stand up all day, every day because they are so overcrowded. Overcrowding is a serious issue throughout jails worldwide. Countries leave their prisoners to fend for themselves and live as horribly as possible, denying them food and other basic necessities. Prison guards are often corrupt and violent in third world countries and communist countries. In some of the worst prisons, inmates are beaten, raped, and starved consistently and often have premature

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