Prison

A prison,correctional facility, penitentiary, gaol (Ireland, UK, Australia), or jail is a facility in which inmates are forcibly confined and denied a variety of freedoms under the authority of the state as a form of punishment. The most common use of prisons is within a criminal justice system. People charged with crimes may be imprisoned until they are brought to trial; those pleading or being found guilty of crimes at trial may be sentenced to a specified period of imprisonment. Besides their use for punishing civil crimes, authoritarian regimes also frequently use prisons and jails as tools of political repression to punish what are deemed political crimes, often without trial or other legal due process; this use is illegal under most forms of international law governing fair administration of justice. In times of war, prisoners of war or detainees may be detained in military prisons or prisoner of war camps, and large groups of civilians might be imprisoned in internment camps.

Prison (disambiguation)

A prison is a place of detention.

Prison may also refer to:

  • Prison (1949 film), by Ingmar Bergman
  • Prison (1988 film), starring Viggo Mortensen
  • Prisons (album), a 2006 album by Eyes of Fire
  • Prison Oval, Jamaican stadium
  • En prison, a roulette term
  • "Prison", a song by Anton Ewald
  • See also

  • Prison rock, pessimistic genre of Chinese rock music
  • "Prison Song" (song), album track on Toxicity by System of a Down
  • Spirits in prison, one of the Christian concepts about the afterlife
    • Spirit prison, in Latter-day Saints beliefs, a place in the afterlife where nonbelievers can become believers
  • Spirit prison, in Latter-day Saints beliefs, a place in the afterlife where nonbelievers can become believers
  • Penal system of Japan

    The Penal system of Japan (including prisons) is part of the criminal justice system of Japan. It is intended to resocialize, reform, and rehabilitate offenders. The penal system is operated by the Correction Bureau of the Ministry of Justice.

    Procedure

    On confinement, prisoners are first classified according to gender, nationality, type of penalty, length of sentence, degree of criminality, and state of physical and mental health. They are then placed in special programs designed to treat their individual needs.

    Vocational and formal education are emphasized, as is instruction in social values. Most convicts engage in labor, for which a small stipend is set aside for use on release. Under a system stressing incentives, prisoners are initially assigned to community cells, then earn better quarters and additional privileges based on their good behavior.

    Administration

    The Correctional Bureau of the Ministry of Justice administers the adult prison system as well as the juvenile correctional system and three women's guidance homes (to rehabilitate prostitutes). The ministry's Rehabilitation Bureau operates the probation and parole systems. Prison personnel are trained at an institute in Tokyo and in branch training institutes in each of the eight regional correctional headquarters under the Correctional Bureau. Professional probation officers study at the Legal Training and Research Institute of the Ministry.

    Camping

    Camping is an elective outdoor recreational activity. Generally held, participants leave developed areas to spend time outdoors in more natural ones in pursuit of activities providing them enjoyment. To be regarded as "camping" a minimum of one night is spent outdoors, distinguishing it from day-tripping, picnicking, and other similarly short-term recreational activities. Camping can be enjoyed through all four seasons.

    Camping may involve sheltering in the open air, a tent, caravan, motorhome, or primitive structure. Luxury may be an element, as in early 20th century African safaris, but including accommodations in fully equipped fixed structures such as high-end sporting camps under the banner of "camping" blurs the line.

    Camping as a recreational activity became popular among elites in the early 20th century. With time, it grew more democratic, and varied. Modern participants frequent publicly owned natural resources such as national and state parks, wilderness areas, and commercial campgrounds. Camping is a key part of many youth organizations around the world, such as Scouting, which use it to teach both self-reliance and teamwork.

    Chungsan concentration camp

    Chungsan concentration camp (also spelled Jeungsan, Jungsan or Joongsan) is a reeducation camp in North Korea. The official name of the camp is Kyo-hwa-so No. 11 (Reeducation camp no. 11).

    Location

    The camp is located in Chungsan county, in South Pyongan province of North Korea. It is situated at the Yellow Sea coast, around 50 km (31 mi) west of Pyongyang.

    Description

    Chungsan camp is a sprawling largely women's penitentiary with between 3,300 and 5,000 prisoners. Since 1999 the camp is used to detain female defectors, which account for 50 – 60% of the prisoners, while others are incarcerated for e.g. theft, prostitution or unauthorized trade. The camp is surrounded by agricultural plots, where the prisoners have to grow rice and corn for delivery to the Ministry of Public Security.

    Human rights situation

    The food rations are very small. According to a former female prisoner, one third of the prisoners died from combinations of malnutrition, disease, and forced labor within a year. Dead prisoners are buried in mass graves on a nearby hill. She reported that the prisoners were often beaten with iron bars, if they did not work hard enough. She got very ill, because her wounds from the beatings got infected.

    Chongjin concentration camp

    Chongjin concentration camp (Chosŏn'gŭl: 청진 제25호 관리소, also spelled Ch'ŏngjin) is a labor camp in North Korea for political prisoners. The official name is Kwan-li-so (Penal-labor colony) No. 25. Satellite images show a major expansion of the camp after 2010.

    Location

    The camp is located in the city of Chongjin in the North Hamgyong province of North Korea. It is situated in Suseong district (Susŏng-dong) of Songpyong-guyok, around 7 km (4.3 mi) northwest of the city center and 1 km (0.62 mi) west of Susŏng River (Susŏngch'on).

    Description

    Chongjin camp is a lifetime prison. Like the other political prison camps it is controlled by the state security agency. But while the other camps include many vast prison-labor colonies in remote mountain valleys, Chongjin camp is only one big prison building complex similar to the reeducation camps. The camp is around 500 m (1500 ft) long and 500 m (1500 ft) wide, surrounded by high walls and fences and equipped with guard towers. The number of prisoners is estimated to be between 3000 and 5000.

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    ... bars — just as the American GIs handed bits of food to starving prisoners when they liberated the Dachau and Buchenwald camps in Germany and discovered the horrors of what the Nazis had perpetrated.
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    The Daily Mail 05 Apr 2025
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    Wtop 05 Apr 2025
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    Manila Bulletin 05 Apr 2025
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    North Korean defector recalls the harrowing moment he was forced to watch a public execution ...

    The Daily Mail 05 Apr 2025
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    CoinDesk 05 Apr 2025
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    The Daily Telegraph 05 Apr 2025
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    The Gazette Cedar Rapids 04 Apr 2025
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    News Round-Up

    The Daily Sceptic 04 Apr 2025
    Terrorism suspect linked to 7/7 bombings set to be released from prison” – Haroon Aswat, jailed for 20 years for plotting to form an extremist training camp, is set to be freed despite remaining a “risk to national security”, reports the Express ... 6.
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    ‘Trump is a coward’: meet the US soldiers who served in Ukraine

    The Spectator 03 Apr 2025
    In 2015, Donald Trump was openly dismissive of John McCain, who spent more than five years in a North Vietnamese prison camp, saying he preferred war heroes ‘who weren’t captured’.
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    The Washington Institute 03 Apr 2025
    One crucial point not mentioned in the new SDF deal is the government’s claim that Damascus will take control of the northeastern camps and prisons holding an estimated 50,000 IS-affiliated fighters and civilians.
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    This Was Brainerd - April 3

    Brainerd Dispatch 03 Apr 2025
    Ken Gordon, who was rescued from the Jap prison camp at Cabanatuan, Philippines by Army Rangers and Filipino guerrillas, returned home to Merrifield last night ... Brainerd's Company A in that prison.
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    My Central Jersey 03 Apr 2025
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    Washington Blade 03 Apr 2025
    For instance, podcaster Joe Rogan questioned the deportation of a gay hairdresser to a prison camp in El Salvador ... up and deported and sent to, like, El Salvador prisons,” Rogan said on Saturday.
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    ‘What’s happening now is unprecedented’: Political activism, protests in Vancouver accelerate

    The Spokesman-Review 03 Apr 2025
    Vancouver native Josh Iwata used to dream of driving a fancy new Tesla electric car away from the local showroom. “I was a big Elon Musk fan,” he said ... Not anymore ... Their son, Iwata’s father, was born in the prison camp.
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