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28 Sentences With "rejoin society"

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

Most experts, including many conservatives, have now embraced reforms that make it easier for prisoners to rejoin society.
I desperately wanted to rejoin society, but more specifically, I wanted to rejoin whoever in society was having fun.
He says he knows first-hand how difficult it can be for people with criminal records to rejoin society.
But first get those jeans onto a valet chair in your bedroom, give your legs some exercise and rejoin society!
To the contrary, evidence suggests that keeping prisoners connected to their civic responsibilities makes it easier for them to rejoin society.
I've said for a long time that I've hung up my cape, and I want to start a family and rejoin society.
For centuries, our legal system has relied on the fundamental premise that, once a criminal serves his sentence, he may rejoin society.
It is largely unclear what the path forward looks like, as rebel fighters were supposed to give up their weapons and rejoin society.
After he completed his sentence for attempted armed robbery and possession of stolen property, his parole board said he was ready to rejoin society.
The point of these policies, which deserve to be widely emulated, is to give people with criminal records the chance to rejoin society as productive citizens.
There is a light at the end of the tunnel (and, for those around you, the comfort of knowing when you are no longer contagious and can rejoin society).
The deal allowed some 13,163 former rebels to rejoin society, yet the report noted that armed groups including dissidents of the FARC who rejected the accord are still recruiting children and adolescents.
Hannah Dweck and Yael Luttwak's Guest House focuses on women grappling with drug addiction in Northern Virginia, following three of them as they prepare to rejoin society with the help of a transitional housing program.
But when she went to vote this weekend, she could not get past a searing question: How could she allow the rebels, who had terrorized her family when she was an infant, to rejoin society without facing prosecution?
While this beloved sandwich will rejoin society around the time of year another poultry bird typically dominates the food scene, come to think of it, a Popeyes Friendsgiving with The Sandwich as the main course doesn't sound half bad.
If the courts of appeals uphold these rulings, it could help force the board to use parole as intended: not to minimize the seriousness of a crime, but to acknowledge that the person who committed it can change and deserves a chance to rejoin society.
Now, the fate of a peace deal in which the rebels vow to lay down their arms, rejoin society and end more than 50 years of war is in the hands of Colombians like Mr. Moncayo, many of whom still nurse deep wounds and have ample reason to be suspicious of the rebels' promises.
What Thank You for Your Service so effectively chronicles is the way veterans are too often used as political props, willingly or not; they're praised and thanked, but also trotted out and forced to slog through a veterans affairs system that would rather they just quietly rejoin society without asking for too much, or else go back to the battlefield, where they can't complicate the patriotism of those who idealize it.
Reintegration is an important part of being released from prison. It is when officers try to aid inmates with necessary information and tools to successfully rejoin society and return to the life you may have had before imprisoned. The program focused on individuals between the ages of 16 and 24.Niles, B., & Bernard, A. (2000).
Furthermore, the hospital remains as a significant place with a statement of compassion and care besides its unpleasant downfalls. The Innocenti was responsible for the care of abandoned children and provided them with the ability to rejoin society. The first infant abandoned was on February 5, 1445, ten days after opening. Babies were received, wet nursed and weaned.
1957 Albert Lasker Clinical Medical Research Award This successful use of drugs for two major categories of psychiatric illness led to the release of thousands who were able to rejoin society. Kline's work has been acknowledged as a major factor in opening a new era in psychiatry: psychopharmacology. During the 1960s the Rockland Research Institute grew to more than 300 staff. Kline's reputation drew biomedical researchers from around the world.
She rejected her sister's requests to rejoin society. Instead, she carried out her religious duties until 1745, when she met the Quaker widower Abraham Darby of Coalbrookdale. They married at Preston Patrick on 9 March 1746. Abiah Darby (named as Tobiah (sic)) in the Town Hall, DerbyDerby Mercury report, 19th – 26th August, 1774 Her new husband was revolutionising the iron industry and she became the hostess to businessmen as well as fellow Quakers. Abiah recorded the details of many of their visitors between 1752 and 1769 in her journals.
In 2007, Dr. Sandra Fleming had Deveraux awakened so he could undergo rehabilitation therapy and rejoin society, and they both relocated to Switzerland. At the same time, the US Government shut down the White Tower program. In 2009, Deveraux is forcibly returned to active duty by the US military to participate in a mission to rescue the Ukrainian prime minister's children, held hostage by renegade Commander Topov in the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, which is rigged with a time bomb. To combat the terrorists' secret weapon, a Next Generation UniSol (NGU), Deveraux is reconditioned, geared up and sent to the plant, where he slaughters most of the terrorist forces.
His idea was to bring the understanding that inmates were rehabilitable. He wanted to introduce ethical thinking and proper decision making into the inmates life's in hopes they could rejoin society. As the Great Depression hit, the crime rates increased due to individuals having to commit crimes for survival. Although there were still rising numbers of incarcerations from 1929–1970, the prison population increased dramatically when Nixon's War on Drugs called for mandatory sentencing. Around the time Nixon's act was introduced, another tact was put in place allowing an individual to have two convictions with a serious felony, then placed in prison for lifin’t.
Each of the series revolves around girls who have been infected with a mysterious virus known as the A Virus (Armed Virus). These girls are divided into two classes; , who can transform into weapons when sexually aroused, and , who have the power to wield an Extar's weapon form, known as Liberator Arms, through a process known as Drive. These girls are brought to separate islands to spend their days completely isolated from the rest of the world until the islands' Observers, authorized by the government Organisation AAA, ostensibly deem them ready to rejoin society again. Mermaid follows an Extar named Mamori Tokonome who forms a partnership with the Liberator Mirei Shikishima.
Ten Seconds from the Sun (2005) is a novel about a Thames river tug boat captain who as a 12-year-old was sent to jail for murder but on completing his sentence was released and allowed to rejoin society, until a car accident brings him together with a figure from his past, his former partner in crime and half-sister Celestine.Alfred Hickling, "Ten Seconds from the Sun" (Review), The Guardian (UK), 23 July 2005 The Observer found it at once a "clever psychological thriller" and a deeper reflection on guilt, memory, truth, and other issues.Stephanie Merritt, "No hiding place", The Observer (UK), 17 July 2005 The Telegraph found it slightly overburdened by research but a "tightly written" exploration of a societal taboo.Sophie Lewis, "River of troubles", The Telegraph, 21 Aug 2005 The novel won the Weishanhu Prize in China for the best foreign novel.
Disfranchisement due to criminal conviction, particularly after a sentence is served, has been opposed by the Sentencing Project, an organization in the United States working to reduce arbitrary prison sentences for minor crimes and to ameliorate the negative effects of incarceration to enable persons to rejoin society after completing sentences. Its website provides a wealth of statistical data that reflects opposing views on the issue, and data from the United States government and various state governments about the practice of felony disfranchisement. Such disenfranchisement policy currently excludes one in six African-American males. For example, in the 1998 elections, at least 10 states formally disenfranchised 20 percent of African-American voters due to felony convictions (Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, 1999). Excluding felons provided “a small but clear advantage to Republican candidates in every presidential and senatorial election from 1972 to 2000” (Manza & Uggen, 2006, p. 191).
The Clubhouse model of psychosocial rehabilitation is a community mental health service model that helps people with a history of serious mental illness rejoin society and maintain their place in it; it builds on people's strengths and provides mutual support, along with professional staff support, for people to receive prevocational work training, educational opportunities, and social support. Its validity is moderated and approved by the International Center for Clubhouse Development. The model has its roots in a support group formed in 1943 inside Rockland Psychiatric Center in New York; when people were discharged they met in New York City, and eventually formalized their group in a house in Manhattan that was called "Fountain House". The group hired professional staff for the first time in 1955; together staff and members created a set of day programs that, along with the member-centered approach, became the model for other clubhouses.

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