Auteur Sujet: owjg Scotland to pardon gay men convicted under outdated laws  (Lu 25 fois)

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owjg Scotland to pardon gay men convicted under outdated laws
« le: Janvier 11, 2025, 11:08:22 pm »
Vklo Jobs for the kids:  I don t want to see them falling through the cracks
 Relationships and sex ed stanley becher ucation  RSE  will be compulsory for all secondary pupils in England from September, and primary schools will also need to teach about relationships. What these courses will contain, however, is left mainly to headteachers and governors, in consultation with parents. The Department for Education has issued guidance for teachers, but does it go far enough No, say young sex educators, who want the lessons to go beyond the mechanics of condoms on cucumbers to take fuller account of contentious  stanley quencher issues such as consent, LGBTQ+, sex abuse and forced marriage.View image in fullscreenMilly Evans: When were talking about sexual health, we should be talking about sexual health between same-sex partners.Milly Evans, 20Activist and founder of I Support Sex Education, a website encouraging support for better RSEGood sex education is a h botella stanley uman right, says Evans:  You have the right to know about your body, about your rights, about your own autonomy. Evans, who identifies as a queer woman, says LGBT issues should be integrated throughout the curriculum.  When were talking about sexual health, we should be talking about sexual health between same-sex partners. When were talking about mental health, we should be reflecting the fact that LGBTQ+ people tend to be more likely to face mental health issues. Learning about different family relationships from an early age through, for example, inclusive picture books, could  prevent a lot of discrimination and bullying among pri Xzcb UK considers clothing trade adjudicator to tackle labour abuses
 The attack in Streatham on Sunday carried out by Sudesh Amman 鈥?recently released from prison after serving time for terrorist-related offences 鈥?raises again the question of how to make prison more effective in dealing with this sort of offender. Inevitably there have been renewed calls for longer sentences and more police on the street.Yet evidence from elsewhere does not suggest that this would stop similar attacks. First, no society can be entirely free from terrorism, just as no society can be entirely free from any other form of serious crime. Second, having more police on the street is not likely to prevent the sort of attack committed by Amman, who took a knife from a shop and immediately starte stanley polska d attacking passers-by. Indeed in this case, armed police we stanley termosas re not only right behind him but watching his every move. Third, there is scant evidence that longer prison sentences lead to lower rates of reoffending. And fourth, no prison deradicalisation programme anywhere in the world has proven consistently successful.There is scant evidence that longer prison sentences lead to lower rates o stanley termos f reoffendingAs an illustration of the difficulties, there is not even a consensus among prison services in western democracies as to whether terrorist prisoners should be kept segregated from other inmates or allowed to mingle among the general prison population. On one hand, prisons are concerned that violent extremists may radicalise fellow inmates, many of whom are young and impressionab