corporal punishment

     

Corporal punishment is the eliberate infliction of pain and suffering intended to punish a person or change his/her behavior. Historically speaking, most punishment, whether in judicial, domestic, or educational settings, were corporal in basis. Global progress towards achieving full prohibition of all corporal punishment of children is accelerating worldwide. The UN Study on Violence against Children sets a target date of 2009 for universal prohibition, including in the home. School discipline in the West generally avoids physical correction altogether. The United States, where paddling remains legal in several states, is now the only significant exception to this (Canadian corrective force is widely reported as being of a non-corporal nature). In most European countries it was banned at varying points in the 20th century. On the other hand, school corporal punishment, though probably on the decline overall, is lawful and remains in use in various other parts of the world, and is commonplace in some countries in Africa, the Caribbean and Asia, notably in former British territories but also in a few countries that were never under British rule, such as South Korea and (until very recently) Thailand. According to the Global Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment of Children, at least 106 countries do not prohibit the use of corporal punishment in schools, 147 countries do not prohibit it within alternative care settings.

Trivia about corporal punishment

  • This type of punishment, from the Latin for "body", has been banned in many schools
  • 2-word term for spanking an errant youngster

Tweets about corporal punishment

  • #Mistress St Clare #Eastbourne #Dominatrix