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"indigence" Definitions
  1. a level of poverty in which real hardship and deprivation are suffered and comforts of life are wholly lacking

64 Sentences With "indigence"

How to use indigence in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "indigence" and check conjugation/comparative form for "indigence". Mastering all the usages of "indigence" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Indigence used to be concentrated inland, in agricultural regions with lots of cheap, seasonal labour.
In court documents, his lawyers cited Sweetman's "stated claims of indigence and illness" for the withdrawal.
However, the death penalty designation allowed Slager to declare indigence, making him eligible for a court-appointed attorney.
The word indigence has appeared in four New York Times articles in the past year, including on Oct.
Cruz faces lawsuits and there are claims against his late mother's estate, which complicates the matter of his indigence, Finkelstein said.
Judge Elizabeth Scherer said she would make a decision on Cruz's indigence before April 27, the next court date in the case.
Many people with court debt suffered added consequences related to their indigence — like difficulty meeting other financial obligations, and mental and physical ailments.
Key among the new guidelines: -- Court systems shouldn't jail people for nonpayment of fees and fines without first establishing that nonpayment is willful and not just the result of indigence.
If the prototypical American was white and middle class, and my parents' Chinese accents and indigence marked them as irredeemably fresh off the boat, what chance was there for someone like me to achieve Americanness?
"The modest material advantages recognized for former high state officials...are not intended to enrich these officials but to grant them a vital minimum (salary) so they don't fall ... into indigence and precariousness," Kalala said.
They once walked this boardwalk, eating shaved ice and posing for selfies, but fled at the first sign of commercial depreciation, abandoning it all to indigence and petty crime, and, at last, to the King of Retired Amusements.
Instead, while their art has been celebrated and a select few creators have attained financial success, the communities are still facing the front lines of climate change with little by way of steady economic vehicles to protect them from change and indigence.
So far, the museum's offerings have included an event last October to celebrate the 50th anniversary of "Cathy Come Home," a seminal Ken Loach film broadcast on the BBC that followed the descent into indigence of a fictional working-class British couple.
But indigence is no solution to addiction, and these are risks you could help mitigate by getting him wise financial advice and by encouraging him to seek help for his abuse problem (though it will come to nothing if he doesn't see it as a problem).
At the center is a boy who is poor but honest, brave and hard-working — attributes that eventually attract the attention of an older, well-off and benevolent stranger who, accustomed to greedy jerks, is moved by the strength of his character and helps to lift him from indigence.
The gap of not qualifying for insurance, as well as not being able to apply for insurance, leave these people in medical indigence.
THE TOWER.-- Misery, distress, indigence, adversity, calamity, > disgrace, deception, ruin. It is a card in particular of unforeseen > catastrophe. _Reversed:_ Negligence, absence, distribution, carelessness, > apathy, nullity, vanity.
Daridra yogas or Nirdhanta yogas along with Kemadruma yoga and Shakat yoga, are certain exceptional ava-yogas or unfavourable planetary combinations that indicate poverty. The word, Daridra (Sanskrit: दरिद्र) means poor, needy or deprived, and the word, Nirdhanta (Sanskrit: निर्धनता) means poverty, poorness or indigence.
This critique suggests that the encyclopedic project is "tainted by its association with master narratives"Rasula, Jed. "Textual Indigence in the Archive." Postmodern Culture (May 1999). Quoted in Letzler, "Paradox", 2 and that it reinforces the "illusion of a totalizing system"Herman, Luc and Petrus van Ewijk.
The Florentines said, "Actum est de eo." Rome once more, then Mantua, then Florence, then Rome, then Naples, then Rome, then Naples—such is the weary record of the years 1590–94. He endured a veritable Odyssey of malady, indigence and misfortune. To Tasso everything came amiss.
Laura Maggi "Judge doesn't buy indigence plea" in Times-Picayune, August 7, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B3. Letten's office had put the Loyola Avenue property on hold because of concerns over its potential forfeiture if involved in the felony counts associated with Mose Jefferson's brother William J. Jefferson.
Augusto Burchi (February 12, 1853 – 1919) was an Italian painter born in Florence. Due to the indigence of his family, he was never formally trained in an academy. He worked under Gaetano Bianchi in many restorations and decorations in Florence, including in the Palazzo Vecchio and the Palazzo Medici-Riccardi. He worked in Cosenza with Federico Andreotti.
Proverbium 28: 323-338. :Application to business :is the root of prosperity :but those who ask questions :that do not concern them :are steering the ship of folly :towards the rock of indigence. :Natural affection is stronger than soup :and offspring more precious than carbuncles. :He who attempts to deceive the judicious :is already baring his back for the scourge.
Retrieved 22 June 2019. Hayek advocated "some provision for those threatened by the extremes of indigence or starvation due to circumstances beyond their control". Hayek argued that the "necessity of some such arrangement in an industrial society is unquestioned", be it "only in the interest of those who require protection against acts of desperation on the part of the needy",Hayek, Friedrich; Hamowy, Ronald, ed. (2011) [1960].
He was also responsible for the Boïeldieu suspension bridge. Barbet's social policy, called by some contemporaries the "Barbet System", was to make the poor do useful work. His main target was the "lazy" or "bad" poor, who made begging their main way of life, but he also thought that the insane could do useful work. He promoted eliminating indigence in Rouen by creating charitable workshops.
In exile Gustav used several titles, including Count Gottorp and Duke of Holstein-Eutin, and finally settled at St. Gallen in Switzerland where he lived in a small hotel in great loneliness and indigence, under the name of Colonel Gustafsson. It was there that he suffered a stroke and died. At the suggestion of King Oscar II of Sweden his body was finally brought to Sweden and interred in the Riddarholmskyrkan.
Joyce concocted a number of money- making schemes during this period, including an attempt to become a cinema magnate in Dublin. He frequently discussed but ultimately abandoned a plan to import Irish tweed to Trieste. Correspondence relating to that venture with the Irish Woollen Mills were for a long time displayed in the windows of their premises in Dublin. Joyce's skill at borrowing money saved him from indigence.
His chief work, however, is from the east window of King's College Chapel, Cambridge, which he drew and engraved, and then finished highly in colours. He published A Dissertation on the Windows of King's College Chapel, Cambridge (Camb. 1818), from which it appears he was engaged on an engraving of one of the south windows. Baldrey died in indigence at Hatfield Wood Side, Hertfordshire, on 6 December 1828, leaving a widow and eleven children.
Like Rousseau, the classical liberal Adam Smith believed that the amassing of property in the hands of a minority naturally resulted in an disharmonious state of affairs where 'the affluence of the few supposes the indigence of many' and 'excites the indignation of the poor, who are often both driven by want, and prompted by envy, to invade [the rich man's] possessions.'Adam Smith. The Wealth of Nations, Book V, Chapter 1, Part 2. Project Gutenberg.
During Cultural Revolution, in December 1966, the school changed the name to "Jiashan Oriental Red High School", and was managed by the Indigence Management Commission of Fengtong Commune. The school began normalization in 1972. In that fall, new students enrolled in senior high section and the school transformed to a comprehensive high school, consisting of both junior and senior high sections. In December 1972, it adopted the name "Jiashan Second High School" and retained the name till July 2001.
For instance, Bonner's philanthropic work is portrayed as being without difficulty. He has no trouble getting companies to donate money to his organization. His single mother, VanDenburgh wrote, has a "dubious Southern accent" and appears not to do any work for her real-estate job. VanDenburgh found the homeless mother and son in the subplot similarly unrealistic because the duo appear perfectly nourished and immaculately clean despite being forced by their indigence to sleep in a car.
By 2009, the Plaza and the neighborhoods of Guerrero and Tlatelolco surrounding it had been in decline for decades. Infrastructure had not been maintained or updated, but the most serious deterioration for the area has been in the way of security. The area is well known for thieves, especially on the side streets, indigence and public drunkenness. This deterioration has caused many legitimate businesses to leave these neighborhoods and the number of tourists visiting the Plaza itself has greatly declined.
The focus of doual'art is on contemporary art and urban transformations. Since 1991, the organization has exhibited and produced artworks of Cameroonian artists and it has invited contemporary artists of other nationalities to Douala in order to create a bridge between the city and contemporary art productions. The purpose of doual'art is to foster Douala's cultural and urban identity. Indeed, artistic creation is considered a trigger of change, a paradigm of development, and most crucially an effective means to fight indigence and poverty.
World Bank classifies Latin America in the lower middle and upper middle income range. An estimated 181 million individuals (33.2 percent of the population) live in poverty and seventy-one million of these (12.9 percent) in indigence. Between 2002 and 2008, forty-one million people were able to sustain enough progress to no longer be characterized as poverty but with the current Global recession, this number has decreased by nine million. Ten of the 15 countries with the highest levels of inequality are in the region.
The play recounts the urban adventures of two male villagers (named Mowhebat and Zolfaqar) in Tehran during the earlier stages of street demonstrations in the 1979 revolution. Driven by drought and indigence, the two arrive in the large city in the latter months of the shah's rule in order to seek employment. They end up as hirelings in large crowds of mercenary vagabonds demonstrating against revolutionaries. Each day they dress up as workers, party members, students, parents of demonstrating students protesting against their own rebellious children, etc.
Words: teprÿdav[ſ]ʒÿ (let it strike), vbagÿſte (indigence) There are two main dialects of the Lithuanian language: Aukštaitian dialect and Samogitian dialect. Aukštaitian dialect is mainly used in the central, southern and eastern parts of Lithuania while Samogitian dialect is used in the western part of the country. The Samogitian dialect also has many completely different words and is even considered a separate language by some linguists. Nowadays, the distinguishing feature between the two main Lithuanian dialects is the unequal pronunciation of accented and unaccented two-vowels uo and ie.
His appealing facade soon has the Kittredges putting him up, lending him money and taking satisfaction in his praise for their posh lifestyle. Paul's scheme continues until, after he brings home a hustler, his actual indigence is revealed. The shocked Kittredges kick him out when it is revealed that they are but the most recent victims of the duplicity with which Paul has charmed his way into many upper- crust homes along the Upper East Side. Paul's schemes become highbrow-legend, anecdotal onaccounta, which are bantered about at their cocktail parties.
Westerhout died in Naples. Because of indigence besetting the family, the City of Naples paid for funeral and burial in the monumental Cemetery of Poggioreale. After the death of Niccolò, his friends and his brother Vincent tried to offer his music compositions to various publishers but they were unable to bear the costs necessary for its distribution and his music was soon forgotten. Recently, the tomb that housed the remains of the composer and some of his relatives has been identified at the Congregation of St. Raphael a Mater Dei.
The church, often spelt "St Peter le Poor", was in existence by the end of the 12th century. The name was traditionally explained as a reference to the poverty of the area - although by the beginning of the 19th century it was one of the richest in the City - or to its proximity to the monastery of St Augustine, whose monks professed indigence. The patronage of the church belonged to the dean and chapter of St Paul's Cathedral. St Peter's was rebuilt in 1540, and enlarged on the north side in 1615.
In 1759 she published, by subscription The Miscellaneous Works, in Prose and Verse, of Mrs. Mary Latter, in three parts, consisting respectively of epistolary correspondence, poems, and soliloquies, and (part iii.) a sort of prose poem, prompted by a perusal of Edward Young's Night Thoughts, and entitled A Retrospective View of Indigence, or the Danger of Spiritual Poverty. A short appendix deals with temporal poverty, and describes the writer as resident "not very far from the market-place, immersed in business and in debt; sometimes madly hoping to gain a competency; sometimes justly fearing dungeons and distress". The work is inscribed to Mrs.
Two of the applicants were rejected ".. though their moral character, age and indigence was fully ascertained.." because they could not provide proof of their husband's link to the Incorporated Trades. The state of one of those accepted, a Mary Weir, underscores the real need that was being met. A minute of the Governor's on 2 February 1802 records that she ".. came over from the new town in a cart, she being unable to walk on account of the poor state of her health..". By 20 May of that year, a Governess had been appointed after a detailed exchange of letters with the founder.
The colonia is located in the borough of Cuauhtémoc, which has some of the highest crime rates in the city the same as Tepito, one of the notorious places for being unsafe. Obrera is listed in the top ten as far as crimes reported, which include small scale drug trafficking and indigence. Young architects from Mexico City, participating in the XI International Architecture Show in Italy, proposed a project for this area based on the philosophy of recycling of urban land. Their project was sponsored by the Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes and the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes.
Winifred Selina "Bena" Sturt was the second daughter of Henry Gerard Sturt, 1st Baron Alington, of Crichel, Dorset, and his first wife Lady Augusta Bingham, the first daughter of George Charles Bingham, 3rd Earl of Lucan. Henry Gerard Sturt was a racing magnate and close friend of Edward, prince of Wales. The Sturt family opposed Winifred's engagement to Charles Hardinge, 1st Baron Hardinge of Penshurst on account of Winifred and Charles' consanguinity (they were first cousins), as well as Hardinge's relative indigence, but the couple married on 17 April 1890.ODNB profile; accessed 27 March 2014.
This unidentified gentleman is only described as "a graduate of Trinity College". Leech was written about with great sympathy, focusing on how she was "the female orphan" in newspaper and commentary published about her, pieces about her detailed her piety and poverty. In the only collection of her poetry, Poems on various subjects published in 1828, her editor describes her life spent in "labour, indigence, and obscurity" and how any profits from the work would aid her in her "pilgrimage through life". Leech became lame, and appears to have been suffering from a condition like rheumatoid arthritis.
Along with Le Beau Serge by Claude Chabrol, who produced The Sign of Leo, it counts as one of the first films of the French New Wave. The title refers to the Zodiac sign of Leo, under which the protagonist says he was born, and much of the plot revolves around notions of luck and fate. The penniless Pierre believes he has inherited a fortune but, when told it went to a cousin, sinks into indigence and despair. Then he is found by a friend who says the cousin has died and Pierre has really inherited the fortune.
Domestica showed this version of Cursive to have a tight-knit, hard-rock sound with the addition of Stevens as well as Kasher's newfound focus on introspective, storytelling focused lyrics. Cursive added cellist Gretta Cohn for the next several releases and the band, and Kasher's writing, found critical success with 2003's The Ugly Organ, a "gale force" of "personal indigence." Cohn departed Cursive in 2005, and the band continued on without a cellist. Cursive has subsequently recorded and released three more studio albums, also concept albums \- a style that Kasher began loosely with The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song and developed full- blown with Domestica.
It is hemmed in by buildings on all sides, including, to the east, the Gate House and, to the west, the George Hotel. On the western side of the Gate are two worn and illegible heraldic angels, probably dating from a rebuilding of the gate by Charles Somerset, 1st Earl of Worcester, in 1524.John Newman, The Buildings of Wales: Gwent/Monmouthshire, Penguin Books, 2000, , p.183 The Earl was responsible for granting a charter to the town, which was described at the time as "fallen into great ruin, indigence and decay", and allowed the town's bailiffs to use the room above the archway as a prison.
" Campbell praised the use of the theme of "Original Sin" in The Rats, saying "that the book can discuss its underlying themes so directly without becoming pretentious...is one of Herbert's strengths." Campbell also defended Herbert's use of violence and indigence as both integral to The Rats' plot, and a break from the clichés of the horror fiction of that time period. The underlying theme of the novel is the lack of care by the government toward the underclass and a lack of reaction to a tragedy until it is too late. Fellow author Peter James stated "I think Jim reinvented the horror genre and brought it into the modern world.
But avarice and ambition in the rich, in the poor the hatred > of labour and the love of present ease and enjoyment, are the passions which > prompt to invade property, passions much more steady in their operation, and > much more universal in their influence. Wherever there is great property > there is great inequality. For one very rich man there must be at least five > hundred poor, and the affluence of the few supposes the indigence of the > many. The affluence of the rich excites the indignation of the poor, who are > often both driven by want, and prompted by envy, to invade his possessions.
On March 23, 2010 the Affordable Care Act came into effect, which impacted the definition of medical indigence in the United States. The act is credited as benefiting thousands of Americans while also being detrimental to others. The initial intent for the act was to insure every person living in the United States, however in a 2015 article FiveThirtyEight stated that the act did not fix the entire problem as it did not cover undocumented and illegal aliens. Acts such as EMTALA ensures that every person coming into the emergency room must be treated regardless of insurance, with the patient left with the responsibility of paying the bill.
Sometimes the JCS monthly fees would be even higher, requiring an "additional 40 months of payments totaling $2,100." However, Bernard Harwood, a former associate justice of the Alabama Supreme Court, who was hired by JCS to review its practices, "found that the company was merely doing the job it had been hired to do, and that any jailing for debt was not the fault of JCS, because private probation companies do not have the legal authority to send people to jail or to determine indigence.". In a 23 June 2014 in-depth article in The New Yorker journalist Sarah Stillman investigated whether lucrative profits from injustice were being made by the private "alternatives to incarceration" industry.
Destitute persons who were unable to pay a court- ordered judgment would be incarcerated in these prisons until they had worked off their debt via labour or secured outside funds to pay the balance. The product of their labour went towards both the costs of their incarceration and their accrued debt. Increasing access and lenience throughout the history of bankruptcy law have made prison terms for unaggravated indigence obsolete over most of the world. Since the late 20th century, the term debtors' prison has also sometimes been applied by critics to criminal justice systems in which a court can sentence someone to prison over willfully unpaid criminal fees, usually following the order of a judge.
One tradition holds that he was so poor that he could not afford papyri to write on, and was constrained to avail himself of potsherds to write down his thoughts. His monicker ho dúskolos signifying "the difficult" or "crabby/grouchy" may reflect the sour temper of someone reduced to eking out a living in extreme indigence. Various interpretations have been advanced arguing the nickname was expressive of his highly compressed, difficult style, or as illustrating his cantankerously disputatious manner, or as alluding to his habit of citing arcane words in contests with other grammarians, in order to perplex them. He died in poverty in what was formerly the royal quarter of the city of Alexandria.
The Governor of Suriname requested the Minister of the Colonies that for future cases "no deportees from the Coast of Guinea be sent to his colony, as they refused to work and had to be supported at the cost of the colony." In February 1859, the Governor reported that Gyapiaba had been earning a living as a tradeswoman for a long time and that she was not supported by the government any longer. In 1862, she was given use of a yard on the Gemenelandsweg in Paramaribo where she was charged low rent, on account of indigence. In March 1869, she was allowed to inhabit the land free of charge, on account of her ill health.
In criminal procedures, the court assigns an accused with a defence counsel in so-called “necessary defence”See section 140 (1) of the German Code of Criminal Procedure cases if the accused has not already retained a lawyer. In practice, however, usually the court appoints the lawyer which the accused had already chosen for his mandatory representation. Necessary defence means that the accused is charged with a felony that is punishable by a minimum sentence of one year’s imprisonment, is tried before a higher court, already is detained on remand or otherwise not considered able to defend himself.Section 140 (1) CCP The entitlement of an accused to have counsel assigned to him in cases of mandatory legal representation is irrespective of indigence.
Ma Dashuai () is a Chinese-language drama–comedy TV series that was filmed and aired in China in three installments of approximately 30 episodes each from 2004 to 2006. The television program, directed by and starring Zhao Benshan (赵本山) in the title role with Fan Wei (范伟) as his brother-in-law, explores such subjects as socio-economic divergence between China's rural and urban populations, urban crime in China, migrant workers, indigence, and China's north-eastern lifestyle in general. The series juxtaposes rural backwardness with China's modern urban lifestyle, often to great comedic and dramatic effect. The majority of the first series, originally aired in 2004, deals with Ma Dashuai leaving his northern rural village, where he was village head, for the big city in search of his daughter.
When the king reached Furnari, near Milazzo, it was nighttime. An old man, in a state of indigence and looking miserable, covered with rags of leather, accosted him and was granted an audience. It was the Messinese Vitale del Giudice (Vitalis de Judice), formerly a friend and crony of Manfred, then reduced to a state of begging because of the consistent fealty he had cultivated for the Swabian dynasty. The old man warned the king of the volatility of political alliances in Sicily and, in particular, of the inconstancy of Alaimo, who had already betrayed Manfred and Charles of Anjou, but made even worse by conditioning and intrigues that, according to the white-haired beggar, he was subjected to by Macalda and by her wicked father, Giacomo Scaletta.
For example, a rights-warning statement similar to the Miranda warnings (and required in more contexts than in the civilian world where it is applicable only to custodial interrogation) was required by Art. 31 () a decade and a half before the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Miranda v. Arizona; Article 38(b) ((b)) continued the 1948 Articles of War guarantee that qualified defense counsel be provided to all accused without regard to indigence (and at earlier stages than required in civilian jurisdictions), whereas the U.S. Supreme Court only guaranteed the provision of counsel to indigents in Gideon v. Wainwright. Additionally, the role of what was originally a court-martial's non-voting "law member" developed into the present office of military judge whose capacity is little different from that of an Article III judge in a U.S. district court.
Lemmon referred to magistrate judge Louis Moore Jr. the question of whether Mose Jefferson should be declared indigent, a status conference on that question set for July 28. Fawer and Lemann both asked Moore to declare Mose Jefferson indigent because a building he owns on New Orleans' Loyola Avenue was put on hold by U.S. attorney Jim Letten. Fawer and Lemann had intended to use the building as a "means of obtaining payment for their services"; but Moore, on August 6, 2009, cited that Mose Jefferson owns a New Orleans East house which he used as collateral for his bond pending trial. According to Laura Maggi of the Times-Picayune on Mose Jefferson's wherewithal to pay defense lawyers, "Moore pointed out that Jefferson could give up the bond on the house and go to jail"; Moore denied the request for indigence.
However, the legal aid seeking litigant can also lodge effectively the complaint together with auxiliary legal aid request but without making the pendency of the case dependent on the court granting legal aid; or the litigant requests legal aid support at a later stage but before completion of case procedures. In the latter scenarios, if legal aid is rejected by the court the litigant, who sought legal aid, will bear the counsel and court fees if he loses the lawsuit (or bears the costs partially if he loses partially). Defence cases are treated equivalently. The German judicare system leads to the review of legal aid cases on indigence and their merits first by the lawyers in private practice, then the courts, while averting dependence on external legal aid institutions removed from the judicial process. Another element of strength lies in the system’s low cost.
With regard to a social safety net, Hayek advocated "some provision for those threatened by the extremes of indigence or starvation due to circumstances beyond their control" and argued that the "necessity of some such arrangement in an industrial society is unquestioned—be it only in the interest of those who require protection against acts of desperation on the part of the needy". Summarizing Hayek's views on the topic, journalist Nicholas Wapshott has argued that "[Hayek] advocated mandatory universal health care and unemployment insurance, enforced, if not directly provided, by the state". Critical theorist Bernard Harcourt has argued further that "Hayek was adamant about this". In 1944, Hayek wrote in The Road to Serfdom: In 1973, Hayek reiterated in Law, Legislation and Liberty: > There is no reason why in a free society government should not assure to > all, protection against severe deprivation in the form of an assured minimum > income, or a floor below which nobody need to descend.
The poet John Burell described the variety of precious stones worn by the "Moirs" in nineteen stanzas of verse. According to Burrell, these men represented the "Moirs" of "the Inds" who lived in comparative ease and comfort by the golden mountain of "Synerdas" and came to honour the queen in Edinburgh, unlike the followers of Faunus who scratched a living in the wilderness; > "Thir are the MOIRS, of quhom I mene, > Quha dois inhabit in the ynds: > Leving thair land and dwelling place, > For to do honour to hir Grace. > Thay have na scant, nor indigence, > Quhair thay do dwell, and have exces, > Nor yit thay have na residence, > With PHAUNUS, God of wildernes: > Bot thay do dwell, quhair thay were wont, > Beside SYNERDAS goldin mont."Papers Relative to the Marriage of James VI > (Edinburgh, 1828), 'Discription', pp. v-vi.: 'THE DISCRIPTION OF THE QVEENS > MAIESTIES MAIST HONORABLE ENTRY INTO THE TOVN OF EDINBVRGH, VPON THE 19.
For example, in some jurisdictions within the United States, people can be held in contempt of court and jailed after willful non-payment of child support, garnishments, confiscations, fines, or back taxes. Additionally, though properly served civil duties over private debts in nations such as the United States will merely result in a default judgment being rendered in absentia if the defendant willfully declines to appear by law, a substantial number of indigent debtors are legally incarcerated for the crime of failing to appear at civil debt proceedings as ordered by a judge. In this case, the crime is not indigence, but disobeying the judge's order to appear before the court. Critics argue that the "willful" terminology is subject to individual mens rea determination by a judge, rather than statute, and that since this presents the potential for judges to incarcerate legitimately indigent individuals, it amounts to a de facto "debtors' prison" system.
After the deliberation, the incorporation into Costa Rica was decided on in the open meeting, drawing up an act in which the main reasons for the same are noted, pointing out the advantages in terms of trade, the desire to participate in the advances that are felt in Costa Rica. Costa Rica, the economic, administrative and public service benefits, the creation of schools, security and quietness, referring to the state of war that Nicaragua lived at that time and the fear that it would spread to the populations of the Party, in addition to point out the indigence in which the towns of the same one and the own geography of the territory are like justifications for the union. Three days later, another similar plebiscite was held in Santa Cruz, with the same result. The election was by majority vote, with 77% of the Party's population in favor of incorporation, and 23% contrary to it.

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