A prison inmate is supposed to have the same basic rights as any other citizen, except to the extent that such rights are circumscribed by physical confinement. This may be surprising to many prison authorities, and most of the general public. The point was made forcefully by Mr. Justice White of the United States Supreme Court in Wolffv. McDonnelI But though his rights may be diminished by the needs and exigencies of the institutional environment, a prisoner is not wholly stripped of constitutional protections when he is imprisoned for crime. There is no iron curtain between the Constitution and the prisons of this country. Until recently these comments could be easily dismissed as American constitutionalism which was inapplicable north of...
The Limits of Citizenship: Rights of Prisoners and ex-Prisoners in USA Contrary to popular beliefs a...
American constitutional jurisprudence has long accepted the notion that the exercise of certain righ...
This paper critically examines the potential of prisoner litigation in Canada to shed light on what ...
A prison inmate is supposed to have the same basic rights as any other citizen, except to the extent...
This paper examines over twenty years of prisoner litigation under the Canadian Charter of Rights an...
Prisoner's rights are those rights that individuals retain after they are found guilty of a cri...
Prisoners rights has become an issue of ever increasing visibility since the middle of the last cen...
With the tenth anniversary of the enactment of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom fast appr...
Despite a pressing need for judicial guidance on the legalities of administrative segregation, Canad...
Inmates confined to correctional facilities have necessarily forfeited many of their civil rights. B...
The law and practice of solitary confinement continues to be a source of rights violations in Canadi...
In prisoner litigation, straightforward victory is rare. Win or lose, prisoners most often remain in...
This paper considers the role that litigation might play in ending the human rights crisis of solita...
Over the past three decades, the US judiciary has grown increasingly less receptive to claims by con...
The past decade marked an evolution in the development and definition of rights retained by individu...
The Limits of Citizenship: Rights of Prisoners and ex-Prisoners in USA Contrary to popular beliefs a...
American constitutional jurisprudence has long accepted the notion that the exercise of certain righ...
This paper critically examines the potential of prisoner litigation in Canada to shed light on what ...
A prison inmate is supposed to have the same basic rights as any other citizen, except to the extent...
This paper examines over twenty years of prisoner litigation under the Canadian Charter of Rights an...
Prisoner's rights are those rights that individuals retain after they are found guilty of a cri...
Prisoners rights has become an issue of ever increasing visibility since the middle of the last cen...
With the tenth anniversary of the enactment of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom fast appr...
Despite a pressing need for judicial guidance on the legalities of administrative segregation, Canad...
Inmates confined to correctional facilities have necessarily forfeited many of their civil rights. B...
The law and practice of solitary confinement continues to be a source of rights violations in Canadi...
In prisoner litigation, straightforward victory is rare. Win or lose, prisoners most often remain in...
This paper considers the role that litigation might play in ending the human rights crisis of solita...
Over the past three decades, the US judiciary has grown increasingly less receptive to claims by con...
The past decade marked an evolution in the development and definition of rights retained by individu...
The Limits of Citizenship: Rights of Prisoners and ex-Prisoners in USA Contrary to popular beliefs a...
American constitutional jurisprudence has long accepted the notion that the exercise of certain righ...
This paper critically examines the potential of prisoner litigation in Canada to shed light on what ...