Wednesday, September 7, 2011
New Book Says Sex Offender Registries Are Too Harsh
In a new book called “Sex Panic & The Punitive State,” professor and author Roger N. Lancaster says that sex offender registries are a waste of time and that current punishments for sex offenders in the US are too harsh.
While sex offender registries in the US now collectively list three quarters of a million people, Lancaster argues that many of those listed are being unfairly treated as public pariahs. End up on a registry and you’ll be told where you can and can’t live, and will find it impossible to get a job. While certain criminals may deserve such punishment, he believes there are quite a few who shouldn’t even be on the lists, explaining in a Washington Post interview that registries now include those convicted of sex crimes who “… had consensual relations with near-adults. Others appear to have been falsely accused and accepted a plea bargain. Some were themselves minors who had consensual sex with their girlfriends or boyfriends. A random sample of one state’s listings shows that two-thirds of the registrants were convicted of non-violent first offenses — and their crimes may have involved no physical contact.”
Lancaster cites research that he says proves sex offender laws are ineffective, and says their main achievement has been to engender an unnecessary atmosphere of fear, with parents afraid to let their children play outside because of the false belief that there are predators lurking around every corner. In the same Washington Post interview, he explained his position: “Stories of abduction, rape, and murder by strangers excite the worst fears. But these are exceedingly rare events — comparable to the chances of being struck by lightning. And only a very small percentage of sex crimes are committed by repeat offenders, which does suggest that the registries mislead parents.”
Lancaster thinks parents should be less worried about sex offender registrants, and more concerned that their own children will end up listed on one. ”Young children have found themselves on sex offender registries and not invariably for brutal acts. Minors who had sex with their boyfriends or girlfriends have been labeled sex offenders,” he warns. “Teens have been prosecuted for ‘sexting.’”
While I understand there are likely people on sex offender registries who don’t belong, there’s this part of me that would rather have that than unknown predators who could have access to my children. Lancaster suggests only certain types of sex crimes should land people on these registries, and that they shouldn’t be public. As a mom, though, I do get some sense of comfort knowing that a registry could help me identify someone who should truly be avoided.
What do you think? Is Lancaster right? Are we ruled by unfounded fears and mistakenly catching too many people up in the sexual predator dragnet? ..Source..
Tuesday, September 6, 2011
Expanding sex registration headed to governor
9-6-2011 California:
RIVERSIDE — An Inland Empire lawmaker's bill to close a loophole in the state's sex offender registration law that permits some out-of-state convicts to avoid registering their status is on its way this week to the governor's desk.
Assemblyman Paul Cook, R-Beaumont, co-authored SB 622, which was introduced by Sen. Ellen Corbett, D-San Leandro.
The legislation, approved unanimously by the Assembly on Wednesday, stipulates that a person who establishes residency in California and has a sex-related conviction from another state would likely be required to register as a sex offender in California.
Under Penal Code section 290, anyone convicted of a felony sex offense must register with a local law enforcement agency when they move into the area. The law also requires that registrants alert authorities whenever they change residence and annually renew their registration.
In some cases, registrants must update their whereabouts every three months.
Until last summer, the California Department of Justice scrutinized out-of- state convicts to determine whether their sex-related crimes were comparable to offenses in the Golden State and merit being placed on the state's list of 90,000-plus registrants.
However, the DOJ's practice was challenged in a lawsuit that reached the Third District Court of Appeal, which tightly narrowed what elements state prosecutors could examine in determining whether an out-of-state offender should register in California.
The result, according to a legislative analysis, was that someone convicted of rape in Nevada might not be required to register as a sex offender in California because its rape statute mandates that some degree of force be used during the act, while Nevada's does not.
“When the courts barred the Department of Justice from reviewing these sex offender cases, they created a virtual safe haven for the predators,” Cook said.
If Gov. Jerry Brown signs SB 622 into law, the DOJ will have complete discretion to review any out-of-state case, using broad criteria, to ascertain whether a person convicted in another jurisdiction should be compelled to register.
Supporters of the bill include Crime Victims United of California, the California District Attorneys Association and the California State Sheriffs' Association.
Opponents include the American Civil Liberties Union, the California Public Defenders Association and California Attorneys for Criminal Justice. ..Source.. by City News Service
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Introducing: California Reform Sex Offender Laws
MISSION STATEMENT
The California Reform Sex Offender Laws organization is dedicated to restoring civil rights for those accused and/or convicted of sex crimes. In order to achieve that objective, CA RSOL will initiate and support legal action, legislation and public outreach.
ORGANIZATIONAL PURPOSE
California RSOL is an organization devoted to educating registered persons within the state of California, their family members, friends and supporters, as well as the general public regarding actions that affect the basic civil rights of registered persons in California. The state of California has more than 45,000 individuals listed on the registry of the California Attorney General -- www.meganslaw.ca.gov -- the greatest number of individuals of any state.
The civil rights of many registered persons have been significantly harmed by existing laws, regulations, and policies within the state of California. Examples range from the “inconvenience” of wearing a GPS monitoring device for many years to death at the hands of a vigilante.
This website will report on actions taken within the state of California that affect the basic civil rights of registered persons, including but not limited to, legal and legislative actions. The website will also include first person stories of registered persons who have been harmed and/or report what is taking place in or near to where they live.
California RSOL is dedicated to providing accurate information to the public and to lawmakers about the relative risk levels and recidivism rates of registered persons. Together with allied organizations, including the National Reform Sex Offender Laws organization, California RSOL will work with law enforcement, the criminal justice system, researchers, mental health professional, victims and victim advocates to ensure that local, state and federal legislators and policymakers take actions that truly enhance community safety.
CONTACT INFORMATION
California Reform Sex Offender Laws
8721 Santa Monica Blvd., Box 855
Los Angeles, CA 90069
www.californiarsol.org
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State of the State: Sex offender legislation is often more about politics than justice
9-6-2011 Illinois:
Unless you spend time in the state Capitol, you would likely never imagine that lawmakers spend a good portion of their time debating a single issue: sex offenders.
A cursory search of the General Assembly’s website shows two dozen bills that deal with sex offenders were introduced since the current legislative session began in January. They include bills requiring sex offenders to register with a university if they are students or workers there, and legislation that pushes the areas where they are allowed to live farther and farther away from places such as schools and parks.
There is a collective groan and eye roll from many Statehouse observers when some of these bills come up for floor debate, not because they think Illinois should take it easy on sex offenders — it would be a difficult task to find anyone who feels that way. It is because the passage of these bills is so politically charged that lawmakers fear voting against them — even bills that are nearly impossible to implement —because they do not want to get labeled as soft on crime by a political opponent during a campaign.
“Illinois for a long time has every new set of legislators come in, and they pass bills on crime because it looks good when you go back home and you say, ‘I’m tough on crime.’ So what happens is, we’re now layered with bill after bill after bill,” Rep. Rosemary Mulligan, a Park Ridge Republican, said in the last days of the spring legislative session while debating a bill that pertained to sex offenders. “Most of us will vote for it because it looks bad if you don’t, which is a mistake that happens when we continue to pass these kinds of laws.” Mulligan and 90 of her House colleagues voted in favor of the bill.
When I started out at Illinois Issues as an intern, one of my wry classmates observed that sex offenders were the only group with so much legislation concerning them that did not have a lobbyist. Apparently the idea was not a new one. Illinois Issues reported in June 2005 that future Senate President John Cullerton remarked after several such bills came up in a committee hearing: "It seems like every other bill deals with sex offenders. If they had any money, they should hire a lobbyist." Since then, at least one registered pedophile has come to Springfield to testify in committee about a piece of legislation that would affect sex offenders. And juvenile justice reform organizations lobby lawmakers if they think proposed penalties for minors are too punitive.
However, because the issue is such a political hot potato, little public debate takes place over which ideas are workable and what penalties might hurt those who do not easily fit the description of a pedophile.
“The big thing is, nobody wants to be seen as being soft on sexual perversion,” says Rep. Jim Sacia, a Republican from Pecatonica. A former special investigator with the FBI, Sacia sponsored a bill that would give judges discretion when sentencing offenders in so-called Romeo and Juliet cases. Such cases involve young people who had consenting sexual contact — often within the context of a relationship — but one of the two is under the legal age. People in these cases have been labeled as sex offenders, sometimes for a decade or more, for something they did when they were young that was not a predatory act. “The registry is such a joke, in my opinion anyway, because we continue to treat Romeo and Juliet crimes the same way we do a sexual deviant,” Sacia says. “I literally have five couples that I know of in my district that the man is married to the woman now.” Sen. William Haine, an Alton Democrat, sponsored similar legislation in the Senate, and like Sacia’s bill, it also could not get the necessary support to pass. Haine, a former state’s attorney, says such offenders should not escape punishment but should not have to register. “Those cases should be prosecuted, and people should be deterred.”
Both lawmakers say they will continue to push legislation to change the registry policies. “We’ve had attempts in the past to change this, and they’ve come to naught because of the political fear of voting on anything,” Haine says. It is an indicator of the climate surrounding the issue that two legislators with law enforcement backgrounds and tough-on-crime records — both spoke passionately against the repeal of the death penalty during floor debate — cannot rally support behind such a measure.
One legislator points to a recent audit as an indicator that lawmakers must start thinking about how the bills they pass will be implemented in the future. “I’m as tough as anybody on these offenders, but we need to make sure what we are doing actually does something,” says Rep. Jack Franks, a Marengo Democrat. He says an audit of the Sex Offender Management Board (SOMB) is a prime example of good intentions that go nowhere in practice.
Auditor General Bill Holland found that the board, whose responsibilities went into effect in 2004, was far from fulfilling its primary goals of tracking sex offenders after they are released from prison. The board has not created a tracking system and does not have a solid plan or timeline to do so. According to the audit, 10,039 sex offenders in Illinois are currently eligible for board monitoring. The audit found that the board was impeded by a lack of staff and funding and by a lack of any laws supporting its efforts.
“Current Illinois law makes it extremely difficult for the SOMB to develop a system to follow the progress of offenders who have completed their sentence,” the audit states. “Under current Illinois law, registration as a sex offender does not require either supervision or monitoring. Approximately two-thirds of registered Illinois sex offenders are not under any form of supervision. Thus, the law does not require that the vast majority of convicted sex offenders who have served their sentence be subject to any mandated supervision or monitoring. As a result, the SOMB faces significant challenges in devising a program to evaluate the treatment progress of sex offenders who are under no legal requirement to report this progress or even cooperate in a minimal way with the SOMB.”
Franks says, “Sometimes the left hand doesn’t know what the right hand is doing.”
He suggests that lawmakers create a commission to look at sex offender laws with a critical eye and make suggestions for clearing out redundancies and concepts that are not being used in practice.
Some lawmakers say a bill to bring Illinois in line with federal legislation would be one way to make the system more coherent, but even Haine, a sponsor of such legislation, warns that such a change should be done with deliberative care.
The federal government is pushing states to pass their own versions of the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act, also known as the Adam Walsh Act, which would create national requirements for how states deal with pedophiles. If states sign on, it would allow for the sharing of registry information on a national scale.
But the plan has run into controversy. Ohio, the first state to comply, saw thousands of legal challenges from offenders who were ordered to spend more time on the registry than they were originally told. Some of them had already completed their required time and were told they had to start registering again because their crimes had been reclassified. In the end, the state’s supreme court threw out provisions of the bill.
Alabama, Delaware, Florida, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, South Carolina, South Dakota and Wyoming have all signed on to the federal standard. CNN reported that the number of offenders on Wyoming’s registry increased from 125 to 1,450 after the state moved to federal registration guidelines. Activists for juvenile justice reform and civil rights across the nation have voiced opposition, saying the plan paints with too broad of a brush and does not allow law enforcement officials to focus limited resources on those most likely to reoffend.
Those are some of the reasons that Haine says he put the brakes on his Illinois legislation. “I held the bill until October … so we can have people come in and offer their views before we take this leap.”
States were required to comply by the end of July or lose some federal funding in 2012. However, the Illinois State Police submitted the state’s compliance paperwork by the deadline. The feds say it will take about three months to sift through the entries and find out which states made the cut. Haine and a spokeswoman for the state police both say they are not concerned that the state will lose funds. “The federal government’s going to have to wait until we pass it,” Haine says. State lawmakers should be reluctant to take such sweeping changes handed down from the federal government, he says, without first seriously reviewing them. “In some instances, Congress adds things that some congressman dreams up from who knows where, and it may or it may not be a good idea.”
Haine says that when Illinois originated its sex offender registry, lawmakers did not consider some of the potential outcomes, such as the Romeo and Juliet cases. “This wasn’t well thought out a number of years ago when we started down this registration path. … It was a good thing to do, but it wasn’t done with critical thought.”
Sacia agrees: “The devil’s in the details. … We keep striving for perfection … but how many times do we create unintended consequences?”
Haine warns that the politics makes a future rollback next to impossible. “Once we pass these things, and they are signed into law, it is very difficult to go back into the law.”
Haine says when sentencing is the topic of legislative debate, he likes to dust off a quote from former Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis. “He said, ‘The hallmark of the law is reasonableness.’ … And that’s what we’re trying to do here. It shouldn’t be based on an unthinking emotional reaction or a harsh vindictiveness. It should be reasonable.” ..Source.. by Jamey Dunn
Monday, September 5, 2011
The Meaning of Labor Day
One holiday that a lot of people don't seem to take as seriously as all the others, in my experience, has been the holiday known as Labor Day.
Labor Day is a celebration of worker's rights and the triumphs that the labor movement has gained over the last couple of centuries. Many people think of Labor Day as just another holiday where they get off of work or out of school, and don't take the time to look at and appreciate what the holiday is really about.
In the United States Labor Day takes place on the first Monday of September. For many this day marks the end of summer and the beginning of the school year. But Labor Day is not just the end of summer, it is a celebration workers of all sorts.
Labor Day is sometimes confused with the holiday known as 'May Day', which is another labor union related holiday that has it's roots in the Socialist Party. These are two separate holidays basically celebrating the same thing. Labor Day was selected as a separate holiday though to disassociate it from the communistic May Day in the late 1800's.
The Origin of Labor Day
The first Labor Day was organized by Peter J McGuire in 1882. McGuire was a carpenter and one of the leaders of the American union movement.
Over 10,000 workers marched from New York's City Hall to Union Square. After the parade they enjoyed a picnic, concert, and speeches at Reservoir Park with their families.
In many cities across America, Labor Day continues to celebrated in the very same fashion.
Different countries around the world also celebrate the holiday along with the United States.
How to Celebrate Labor Day
Generally, the main way to celebrate Labor Day is by taking the day off work and school, and enjoying the company of your family, friends, and neighbors.
Labor Day would not be possible without the help of the workers who originally fought to get the holiday recognized, so when I celebrate it with my family I try to remember those who worked long hours and in bad conditions. Without those workers, we wouldn't have the industrialized civilization that we do today.
If you're looking to go out with your friends and family on Labor Day, the best way to celebrate it in my opinion is by having a picnic or a cook out. Picnics are nice because they allow for everyone to spend time with each other, and picnics were how most laborers in the 1800's shared their breakfasts and lunches. This is one traditional representation of the labor movement that has a significant place in our history, and should be celebrated by all.
No matter what your thoughts are on the labor movement in general, everyone has to work and it's sometimes nice to sit back, take a moment, and remember that labor is the backbone of our economy and life in general. After the laborers got Labor Day recognized as a national holiday, the rest became history. ..Source.. by Holiday Maven
So let us celebrate and honor all workers, including those whose job it is to protect the rights and freedoms we do have, and to protect this country:
Saturday, September 3, 2011
Social media emerges as battleground for protected speech at work
National Labor Relations Board has brought at least four complaints alleging businesses violated labor laws that protect employees from retaliation for office chatter
It's easy to understand why no business would want employees griping about working conditions on Facebook. Yet, employers are getting into trouble for regulating social media activity.
In the past year, the National Labor Relations Board has brought at least four complaints alleging that businesses have violated labor laws that protect employees from retaliation for office chatter. One of its cases is against a BMW auto dealership in the Chicago area.
The federal scrutiny has alarmed many businesses, including nonunion employers, because the National Labor Relations Act covers most private-sector employees. As a result, businesses are carefully navigating the intersection of traditional labor law and the relatively new social media environment.
"This is clearly an area of focus and interest," said Aaron Gelb, an attorney at Chicago law firm Vedder Price, who represents employers in labor disputes. "Until employers recognize what the issues are, everybody is going to be feeling their way around."
The uncertainty about the legal standards for social media prompted the NLRB's acting general counsel last month to release a report detailing the outcome of investigations into 14 charges of unfair labor practices involving social media. The 14 cases are a representative sample of the more than 100 charges that have been filed with the labor board in the past year. The most common issues deal with policies that restrict use of social media or alleged unlawful disciplinary actions, including termination, over the contents of online posts.
The memo attempts to explain why the NLRB prosecuted certain charges and dismissed others. As Lafe Solomon, acting general counsel, said in the memo, "I hope that this report will be of assistance to practitioners and human resource professionals."
What legal experts took away from the report is that the NLRB is basically taking well-established workplace rules and applying them to a different form of communication. Although it's easy for employers to fire a worker in most states, employees have long enjoyed the right to come together to improve their working conditions. This freedom of association is known as "protected concerted activity" in legal terms.
But yesterday's water cooler talk is not the same as broadcasting disparaging comments on Facebook that could reach millions of people. Employers are concerned that workers are defaming the company online.
National labor law does not preclude employers from disciplining employees for inappropriate online behavior. But from the NLRB's perspective, said Jeff Hirsch, an associate law professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law who focuses on employment law, "the key issue is whether employees are acting together out of concern for their working conditions. The fact that others may also hear it isn't directly relevant."
The NLRB's position on social media has not been tested in the courts, and that has some corporate defense attorneys wondering if the report provides much of a guide in developing social media policies.
"I'm waiting to see is there's going to be an employer that fights the NLRB," Gelb said.
A complaint against Karl Knauz BMW in Lake Bluff might be a test case. Last year, the dealership fired a salesman after he posted on his Facebook page that he was miffed that management served bargain-brand hot dogs and bottled water to customers at an event promoting a new car model.
The salesman, Robert Becker, filed an unfair labor practice charge with the NLRB. After investigating his allegations, the NLRB's regional office in Chicago brought a complaint in May on Becker's behalf, arguing that Knauz violated federal labor law by firing him.
The case was detailed in last month's 24-page NLRB report. The office of the general counsel concluded that Becker's Facebook photographs and comments were "clearly concerted." According to the report, before Becker went online, he and other salespeople had expressed concerns that the pedestrian food and beverage would send the wrong message to customers and negatively affect their sales and commissions.
The case was presented to an administrative law judge in July, and a ruling is pending.
James Hendricks, the dealership's attorney, is upset the NLRB discussed his case and the agency's legal theory in the report before the judge has issued a ruling.
"The general counsel's office rendered an opinion about how they found my client guilty, but there has been no finding of guilt," Hendricks said. "That's totally inappropriate."
Nancy Cleeland, an NLRB spokeswoman, said the agency did not act inappropriately because the complaint is a matter of public record.
"The information in the report is also contained in the complaint, and it's also in a press release we put out at the time the complaint was issued," she said. ..Source.. by Ameet Sachdev's Chicago Law
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Hacker gets 6 years in prison for 'sextortion' scheme
9-3-2011 California:
A California man was sentenced to six years in prison for hacking into dozens of computers, stealing personal information and demanding naked images from female victims in exchange for not releasing the stolen information.
Luis Mijangos, 32, an illegal immigrant from Mexico who was living in Santa Ana, California, was engaged in "cyberterrorism" and "sextortion," federal prosecutors said.
He pleaded guilty to charges of computer hacking and wiretapping in March. He was sentenced Thursday during a court hearing in which two of his victims spoke, and one compared her experience to being the victim of domestic violence.
Authorities said he hacked into more than 100 computers by tricking people to download software that allowed him to take control of their computers. He listened to victims through the computers' microphones, read their emails and watched them through their webcams.
He also obtained explicit pictures of many of them.
He threatened the victims by saying he would post the pictures on the Internet if the victim did not send him more explicit videos.
"When one victim shared Mijangos 'sextortionate' threats with a friend, Mijangos responded by posting nude pictures of the victim on her MySpace page," prosecutors said.
Forty-four of the victims were juveniles.
"We now live in a world gone digital, relying on our personal computers for everything from banking, to learning, to intimate communications with friends and family," said United States Attorney Andre Birotte Jr.
" Mijangos invaded the sanctity of many personal digital worlds and used intimate content to victimize and prey upon unsuspecting victims." ..Source.. by CNN
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9/03/2011 06:22:00 AM
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Neighbors Learn Care Home Housing Sex Offenders Will Stay
9-3-2011 Oregon:
CORVALLIS, Ore. -- Ever since three sex offenders moved in a neighborhood just outside of Corvallis, residents have been on edge wondering how the three men could be moved into a once quiet, kid-friendly neighborhood.
On Thursday night, they asked, and got some answers at a neighborhood meeting.
The meeting started with a panel of local and state officials answering written questions submitted by residents.
They were assured many things such as immediate response from Benton County deputies if the sex offenders caused any trouble.
They were told the group home is legally-funded, that all three of the men are there because they were civily-committed and mentally unstable, and security is tight.
But that doesn't ease the pain for the handful of women who have been sexually assaulted, and now have to live next door to similar offenders.
And when they asked if their children have a right to not live in fear, the answer was simple: no, there is no law to guarantee that.
"I am pregnant with my fifth child and this bothers me immensly that no consideration was taking into the fact that the demographic of the neighborhood," said Katie Carleski.
"There's not children outside playing anymore. You don't live there. You have no idea what it's like," said Sandra Altheide, Sandra Lyn Care Homes owner.
"In your heart of hearts you have to know that this is wrong, and you have to know that there is another place for those people and it is not in our neighborhood," said Ramona Fricke.
But their pleas for a change went unheeded.
"I understand the neighbors concerns as they were spoken, and really at this point the residents in the facility haven't done anything wrong, the facility is in compliance with our regulations and statutes so we won't be moving the residents and the home will stay where it is," said Len Ray, Oregon Health Authority Mental Health Services Administrator.
Regardless, residents say they're not giving up. ..Source.. by Heather Turner
Friday, September 2, 2011
When Did a Big Hug Become a Bad Thing?
9-2-2011 National:
There was a time when the conventional wisdom was that we needed four hugs a day to survive, eight hugs a day to maintain, and 12 to grow. Later, as media reports of sexual assault cases spread like viruses, along with fear of lawsuits, educators and children were schooled in "bad touch" versus "good touch" (a hug was one of the latter). Now, more and more, we have no touch.
America has always been a low-touch society, but this is getting ridiculous. When teacher education programs begin advising its students to put up a high-five when a kid requests a hug, and teachers' unions instruct educators to refrain from touching kids at all, as reported in a recent Education Week blog, it's time to take a step back and reassess our priorities.
According to an article on the website of the Council for Exceptional Children, the Pennsylvania State Education Association offers the following guidelines on the use of touch: (1) consider the age, sex, and perception (maturity) of the child, (2) use touch only to praise or comfort, (3) ensure there is another adult present, and (4) briefly touch only the shoulder or arm.
Can't you see it now? A young child (how does that apply to guideline number one?) is crying and desperately in need of comfort (that meets guideline number two). But your co-teacher is out on the playground with some of the other children (number three isn't possible!), so you tentatively pat the child on the shoulder (phew, number four applied!) and say, "There, there." The child isn't remotely comforted, but you can rest assured that you've followed guidelines and are in no jeopardy of being sued for child abuse.
But isn't this child abuse? According to Frances Carlson, author of Essential Touch: Meeting the Needs of Young Children, physical contact can be more important to sustaining life than food and water! As she told me in an interview for Body, Mind and Child, children need physical contact in order to thrive and grow in every aspect of development. She cited research indicating that when children are denied touch, they fail to grow physically and to develop the emotional and social skills they need to succeed in early childhood and in life.
Dr. Lisa Fiore, Director of Early Childhood Education at Lesley University, who joined Frances and me for the discussion, pointed out that it's not just in school that children aren't getting the touch they need. Our changing society has resulted in "people engaging in activities requiring less physical contact every day."
When we consider the amount of time children are spending in front of television and computer screens, the lack of opportunity for old-fashioned rough-and-tumble play, and reports of children as old as four and five being pushed in strollers (meaning their hands aren't even being held), we begin to realize just how seldom the child's need for touch is being met.
Ironically, my guests pointed out that when men teach young children, the little ones are more likely to have their touch needs met because men engage in more physical play than women do. They're also more likely than female teachers to have a hand on the child's back while engaging in conversation. But, sadly, it is the touch from the male teacher that is most suspect of all.
Ms. Carlson recommended that, rather than no-touch policies, schools begin to establish "touch" policies that explain the boundaries of what touch looks like in education settings, and that help teachers and parents understand that denying children touch is as problematic as denying access to rest, water, or the bathroom.
Dr. Fiore ended by asking, "Wouldn't it be lovely to embrace touching in the classroom as appropriate and developmentally necessary?"
Wouldn't it be lovely, indeed, if we could put the children's needs ahead of our fears? Even if we discount the research, along with conventional wisdom, we at least should ask ourselves: if we're craving a hug, is a high-five really gonna cut it? ..Source.. by Rae Pica
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Pastor Compares Atheists To “Terrorists, Sex Offenders,” Suggests National Registry
9-1-2011 National:
Ed Brayton notes over at Dispatches from the Culture War that internet pastor Mike Stahl has come up with an interesting idea to assist Christians in day-to-day life. According to Stahl, the nation should set up an “Atheist Registry” in order to provide an updated list of anyone who is a “self-proclaimed atheist,” just as you would do for people convicted of sex crimes or associated with terrorist groups.
Yes, atheists are apparently just that dangerous. Stahl wrote his original proposal last year, where he explained his reasoning behind the registry.
“Now , many (especially the atheists ) , may ask “Why do this, what’s the purpose ?” Duhhh , Mr. Atheist , for the same purpose many States put the names and photos of convicted sex offenders and other ex-felons on the I-Net – to INFORM the public !Although Stahl’s registry would only have a name and perhaps picture of the avowed, publicly declared atheist, and no physical address, he also believes that knowing who are the atheists in your neighborhood could lead to a wonderful opportunity to try and convert, too!
“Perhaps we may actually know some . In which case we could begin to witness to them and warn them of the dangers of atheism . Or perhaps they are radical atheists , whose hearts are as hard as Pharaoh’s , in that case , if they are business owners , we would encourage all our Christian friends , as well as the various churches and their congregations NOT to patronize them as we would only be ‘feeding’ Satan .”Although Stahl came up with his grand plan nearly a year ago, he reposted it recently to his facebook page in order to get some fresh thoughts on his God-fearing brainstorm, causing a storm of activity that forced him both to delete the link and put his blog on private.
It’s probably a bad sign when an internet pastor has to hide himself on the internet. ..Source.. by Robin M.
Sex Offender Registries May Not Be Very Effective
9-1-2011 National:
There's evidence that sex offender registries are crowded with too many people who pose little threat to the community, like those convicted of fornicating with with other teens or sexting photos of themselves. Even if the system isn't perfect, we assume that it's still a valuable tool to protect us against dangerous offenders like rapists and pedophiles. However, according to troubling new research, sex offender registries aren't doing much to reduce crime, and may actually encourage people to reoffend.
Two studies that question the effectiveness of the registries were recently published in the Journal of Law and Economics. The first is a bit less depressing. Columbia University and University of Michigan researchers reviewed data from 15 states that introduced and began to enforce registration and notification laws over the past decade. They found that registration laws, which require that offenders to check in with police and provide information after they're released from prison, do have a significant effect on sex crimes. States with registration requirements and average-size registries had a sex crime rate that was about 13% lower than the sample's average. These laws make it easier for police to monitor sex offenders and seem to discourage people from repeating their crimes.
Yet, the researchers found that public notification laws are counterproductive. While some first-time offenders may be discouraged from committing a crime, introducing public notification laws led to slightly higher sex crime rates. The researchers believe sex offenders may be more likely to repeat their crimes when their information is made public because, "the associated psychological, social, or financial costs make a crime-free life relatively less desirable."
A second study by University of Chicago Ph.D. student Amanda Agan concluded that registries are ineffective across the board. She found the introduction of registry laws didn't change a state's sex crime rate. She also looked at information on 9,000 sex offenders released from prison in 1994, and determined whether they were arrested again. If anything, those released into states with public notification laws were slightly more likely to reoffend. Finally, she looked at Washington D.C. census data and found that having a sex offender living on your block doesn't make you more likely to be the victim of a sex crime.
Sex offender registries comfort us by making us feel like we have some ability to protect our family against the most heinous criminals. In some cases, being able to identify a sex offender has helped people avoid danger, but the research suggests that as a whole the system isn't working like it should. Though we're attached to the idea that public registries make us safer, we may need to reexamine the effects of these laws and change them if they aren't actually helping. ..Source..
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9/01/2011 04:59:00 AM
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Topics: 2011, Recidivism - Registries




