resocialization उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- A more drastic example of resocialization is joining a military or a cult, and the most severe example would be if one suffers from a loss of all memories and therefore would have to relearn society's norms over again.
- "We are focused on changing their behavior . . . as part of a resocialization program, so that when they leave they will know how to appropriately act in society _ know the difference between right and wrong, " he said.
- The San Bernardino County Probation Department's Detention Corrections Bureau operates two Juvenile Detention facilities, a juvenile placement facility specializing in resocialization and living skills for 707 ( a ) youth, and additional units to oversee home arrest, custody transportation, and courtroom responsibilities.
- As explained by ` amko, the sentence was chosen based on directly or indirectly proven 9 murders, based on especially brutal way in which he committed the murders and based on the fact that possibilities of his resocialization are quite limited and the prognosis is bad.
- Resocialization can also be defined as a process wherein individuals, defined as inadequate according to the norms of a dominant institution, are subjected to a dynamic and or rejuvenating those values, attitudes and abilities which would allow them to function according to the norms of said dominant institutions.
- Over the past years, over 100 patients have been participating in this RCT . Preliminary findings in the first 30 patients to complete the 3-year study suggest that ST is outperforming treatment as usual with respect to lowering recidivism risk ( i . e . the risk of recommitting crimes ), and facilitating resocialization into the community.
- This feeling of group solidarity led to increased social capital, which held people together and decreased the sense of anomie among immigrants, which is a " sense of aimlessness or despair that arises when we can no longer reasonably expect life to be predictable . " Immigration, therefore, served as a mechanism for social networks to be built among immigrant populations during a period of intense resocialization and prevalent cases of anomic suicide.
- For example, as defined by James T . Richardson, UNLV Professor of Sociology and Judicial Studies and Director of the Grant Sawyer Center for Justice Studies, deprogramming is a " private, self-help process whereby participants in unpopular new religious movements ( NRMs ) were forcibly removed from the group, incarcerated, and put through radical resocialization processes that were supposed to result in their agreeing to leave the group . " Law professor Douglas Laycock, author of " Religious Liberty : The free exercise clause ", wrote: