نتایج جستجو برای: criminalization

تعداد نتایج: 717  

2017
Ine Vanwesenbeeck

There is a notable shift toward more repression and criminalization in sex work policies, in Europe and elsewhere. So-called neo-abolitionism reduces sex work to trafficking, with increased policing and persecution as a result. Punitive "demand reduction" strategies are progressively more popular. These developments call for a review of what we know about the effects of punishing and repressive...

Journal: :Yale journal of health policy, law, and ethics 2014
Sun Goo Lee

This Note assesses the effect of laws that specifically criminalize behaviors that expose others to the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). This Note examines the relationship between HIV testing decisions by high-risk individuals and the existence of these HIV-specific statutes, as well as the amount of media coverage related to them. One of the main reasons public health experts criticize cri...

Journal: :HIV/AIDS policy & law review 2008
Edwin Cameron Scott Burris Michaela Clayton

Criminalization of HIV transmission is an ineffective tool for combating AIDS and a costly distraction from programmes that we know work--programmes such as effective prevention, protection against discrimination, reducing stigma, empowering women and providing access to testing and treatment. In this article, which is based on a plenary presentation by Edwin Cameron, the authors advance ten re...

2016
S. Anderson K. Shannon J. Li Y. Lee J. Chettiar S. Goldenberg A. Krüsi

BACKGROUND Despite a large body of evidence globally demonstrating that the criminalization of sex workers increases HIV/STI risks, we know far less about the impact of criminalization and policing of managers and in-call establishments on HIV/STI prevention among sex workers, and even less so among migrant sex workers. METHODS Analysis draws on ethnographic fieldwork and 46 qualitative inter...

Journal: :HIV/AIDS policy & law review 2005
Matthew Weait Yusef Azad

In this article, Matthew Weait and Yusef Azad discuss the current law concerning the criminalization of HIV transmission in England and Wales, and raise some issues about the wider implications of criminalization for those working in the HIV/AIDS sector. The authors look at the way the fault requirement of "recklessness" has been interpreted in the cases. They explore the courts' approach to co...

Journal: :HIV/AIDS policy & law review 2009
Edwin Cameron

Criminalization of HIV transmission and exposure is an ineffective tool for combating AIDS and a costly distraction from programs that we know work--programs such as effective prevention, protection against discrimination, reducing stigma, empowering women and providing access to testing and treatment. In this article, which is based on a public lecture he gave at "From Evidence and Principle t...

Journal: :The journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law 2013
H Richard Lamb Linda E Weinberger

In recently published articles, there has been an underemphasis on the role serious mental illness (SMI) plays in causing persons to be in the criminal justice system. Increasing attention has been paid to other factors, including criminogenic needs. While these needs may be present and contribute to criminal behavior, persons with SMI who are at greatest risk of criminalization are those who a...

Journal: :Psychiatric services 2002
H Richard Lamb Linda E Weinberger Walter J DeCuir

With deinstitutionalization and the influx into the community of persons with severe mental illness, the police have become frontline professionals who manage these persons when they are in crisis. This article examines and comments on the issues raised by this phenomenon as it affects both the law enforcement and mental health systems. Two common-law principles provide the rationale for the po...

2017
Carmen H. Logie Ashley Lacombe-Duncan Kathleen S. Kenny Kandasi Levermore Nicolette Jones Annecka Marshall Peter A. Newman

The criminalization of same-sex practices constrains HIV prevention for gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM) and, in part due to the conflation of gender and sexuality, transgender women.1 Criminalization is a structural driver of HIV that indirectly influences HIV vulnerability through multiple pathways: decreased funding for HIV prevention, treatment, and care programs tai...

Journal: :Journal of prisoners on prisons 2011
Colleen Anne Dell Valerie Desjarlais Jennifer M Kilty

Illicit drug use amongst criminalized Aboriginal women is a serious health concern in Canada. Little is understood about how women 's healing is impacted by their views of themselves as, and the stigma associated with being, a drug user, involved in crime and an Aboriginal woman in Canadian society. In this article we address two ways in which women's often silenced voices have uniquely guided ...

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