Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Brazil prisoners reading books to shorten their sentences


Brazil will offer inmates in its crowded prison system a novel way to shorten their sentences – cutting four days for every book they read.

Brazil prisoners reading books to shorten their sentences
A special panel will decide which inmates are eligible to participate in the program dubbed "Redemption through Reading" Photo: ALAMY

Inmates in four federal prisons holding some of Brazil's most notorious criminals will be able to read up to 12 works of literature, philosophy, science or classics to trim a maximum 48 days off their sentence each year, the government announced.
Prisoners will have up to four weeks to read each book and write an essay which must "make correct use of paragraphs, be free of corrections, use margins and legible joined-up writing," said the notice published on Monday in the official gazette.
A special panel will decide which inmates are eligible to participate in the program dubbed "Redemption through Reading".
"A person can leave prison more enlightened and with an enlarged vision of the world," said Sao Paulo lawyer Andre Kehdi, who heads a book donation project for prisons.
"Without doubt they will leave a better person," he said.

1 comment:

Miriam Wakerly said...

Sound like a wonderful idea - so long as they are not reading too many literary crime novels.