This comment explores one facet of the issue of inmate civil rights: the right to marry. An analysis will be made of the current situation nationwide with particular emphasis on Virginia, including proposed guidelines for Virginia\u27s Department of Corrections that reflect the current national trend with regard to inmate marriages
This article examines the complexity of prison sex and the challenges that it raises in the context ...
The right to counsel is a fundamental right, one the framers of our Constitution intended to apply t...
Between 1840 and 1853, 4,068 Irish convict women arrived in Van Diemen’s Land, now known as Tasmania...
In recent years, the Supreme Court has continuously reiterated the importance of the right to marry,...
As a preliminary research inquiry, the purpose of this study is to provide basic information about p...
A sentence to prision invovles much more than simple incarceration and its attendant withdrawal of f...
The civil rights movement has reached into prisons and jails, directing public attention to the fact...
The author discusses recent decisions concerning prisoners\u27 rights, and examines the arguments fo...
Conjugal visitation rights allow prison inmates and spouses to visit privately and have sexual relat...
Brief outline of proposed legal research on the effects of prisons and penal policy on prisoners and...
In 1967, the Supreme Court of the United States unanimously ruled that anti-miscegenation laws were ...
Inmates confined to correctional facilities have necessarily forfeited many of their civil rights. B...
This article examines how the development and status of the rights of incarcerated people is signifi...
Dynamic changes have occurred in recent years in the area of prisoners\u27 rights. The antiquated vi...
This article analyzes legislation and policies that limit prisoners\u27 sexual expression and autono...
This article examines the complexity of prison sex and the challenges that it raises in the context ...
The right to counsel is a fundamental right, one the framers of our Constitution intended to apply t...
Between 1840 and 1853, 4,068 Irish convict women arrived in Van Diemen’s Land, now known as Tasmania...
In recent years, the Supreme Court has continuously reiterated the importance of the right to marry,...
As a preliminary research inquiry, the purpose of this study is to provide basic information about p...
A sentence to prision invovles much more than simple incarceration and its attendant withdrawal of f...
The civil rights movement has reached into prisons and jails, directing public attention to the fact...
The author discusses recent decisions concerning prisoners\u27 rights, and examines the arguments fo...
Conjugal visitation rights allow prison inmates and spouses to visit privately and have sexual relat...
Brief outline of proposed legal research on the effects of prisons and penal policy on prisoners and...
In 1967, the Supreme Court of the United States unanimously ruled that anti-miscegenation laws were ...
Inmates confined to correctional facilities have necessarily forfeited many of their civil rights. B...
This article examines how the development and status of the rights of incarcerated people is signifi...
Dynamic changes have occurred in recent years in the area of prisoners\u27 rights. The antiquated vi...
This article analyzes legislation and policies that limit prisoners\u27 sexual expression and autono...
This article examines the complexity of prison sex and the challenges that it raises in the context ...
The right to counsel is a fundamental right, one the framers of our Constitution intended to apply t...
Between 1840 and 1853, 4,068 Irish convict women arrived in Van Diemen’s Land, now known as Tasmania...