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  1. On the Force-Feeding of Prisoners on Hunger Strike.Kathrine Bendtsen - 2019 - HEC Forum 31 (1):29-48.
    Roughly 80,000 U.S. prisoners are held in solitary confinement at any given time. A significant body of research shows that solitary confinement has severe, long-term effects, and the United Nations has condemned the practice of solitary confinement as torture. For years, prisoners have been organizing hunger strikes in order to protest solitary confinement. But such action is not without consequences, and some inmates have suffered serious injury or death. The question I raise in this paper is whether we ought to (...)
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  • Informed Consent and the Refusal of Medical Treatment in the Correctional Setting.Frederick R. Parker & Charles J. Paine - 1999 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 27 (3):240-251.
    It was not until the nineteenth century that Western nations came to replace mutilation, corporal punishment, and banishment as the favored method of criminal punishment with the more humane concept of imprisonment. Even then, however, a convicted inmate was viewed as nothing more than a slave of the state, entitled only to the most basic of human rights and subject to the whim and peril of his jailor's desire. The shift to imprisonment gradually was accompanied by the additional humanitarian demand (...)
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  • Informed Consent and the Refusal of Medical Treatment in the Correctional Setting.Frederick R. Parker & Charles J. Paine - 1999 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 27 (3):240-251.
    It was not until the nineteenth century that Western nations came to replace mutilation, corporal punishment, and banishment as the favored method of criminal punishment with the more humane concept of imprisonment. Even then, however, a convicted inmate was viewed as nothing more than a slave of the state, entitled only to the most basic of human rights and subject to the whim and peril of his jailor's desire. The shift to imprisonment gradually was accompanied by the additional humanitarian demand (...)
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