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The degree of physical punishment that a parent or carer can use with a child is subject to legal regulation in Australia. In most states and territories, corporal punishment by a parent or carer is lawful provided that it is carried out for the purpose of correction, control or discipline, and that it is "reasonable" having regard to:
■the age of the child;
■the method of punishment;
■the child's capacity for reasoning (i.e., whether the child is able to comprehend correction/discipline); and
■the harm caused to the child (Bourke, 1981).
Corporal punishment that results in bruising, marking or other injury lasting longer than a 24-hour period may be deemed to be "unreasonable" and thus classified as physical abuse. As an example, the New South Wales Crimes Act 1900 (NSW) establishes that corporal punishment is unreasonable if the force is applied to any part of the head or neck of a child or to any other part of the body of a child in such a way as to be likely to cause harm to a child that lasts for more than a short period. Corporal punishment that is unreasonable in the circumstances may lead to intervention by police and/or child protection authorities.
Originally posted by DarknStormy
reply to post by BigBrotherDarkness
I just checked out the Government website here and too some degree, its still legal.
The degree of physical punishment that a parent or carer can use with a child is subject to legal regulation in Australia. In most states and territories, corporal punishment by a parent or carer is lawful provided that it is carried out for the purpose of correction, control or discipline, and that it is "reasonable" having regard to:
■the age of the child;
■the method of punishment;
■the child's capacity for reasoning (i.e., whether the child is able to comprehend correction/discipline); and
■the harm caused to the child (Bourke, 1981).
Corporal punishment that results in bruising, marking or other injury lasting longer than a 24-hour period may be deemed to be "unreasonable" and thus classified as physical abuse. As an example, the New South Wales Crimes Act 1900 (NSW) establishes that corporal punishment is unreasonable if the force is applied to any part of the head or neck of a child or to any other part of the body of a child in such a way as to be likely to cause harm to a child that lasts for more than a short period. Corporal punishment that is unreasonable in the circumstances may lead to intervention by police and/or child protection authorities.
Corporal punishment key issues Australia
Originally posted by BigBrotherDarkness
reply to post by DarknStormy
Oh man, that's another one to consider...getting the jollies from it. One of my friends daughters got spanked; then one day her daughter said mommy spank my butt! She said what? She said spank my butt! She said why? did you do something bad? She said no it feels good. I said maybe you should consider time out as an option at this point...I forgot about that until you mentioned the jolly factor. That was a very awkward moment...I wanted to crawl under the couch. My friend said; after the daughter was out of ear shot...Oh my god; I have turned my daughter into a freak.
The international picture
Internationally, 23 countries have prohibited corporal punishment in all settings in legislation: Austria (1989); Bulgaria (2000); Costa Rica (2008); Croatia (1998); Cyprus (1994); Denmark (1997); Finland (1983); Germany (2000); Greece (2006); Hungary (2004); Iceland (2003); Israel (2000); Latvia (1998); Netherlands (2007); New Zealand (2007); Norway (1987); Portugal (2007); Romania (2004); Spain (2007); Sweden (1979); Ukraine (2003); Uruguay (2007); and Venezuela (2007). Corporal punishment is prohibited in Italy (1996) and Nepal (2005) by Supreme Court ruling (but not legislation) (Global Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment of Children, 2008).
Within these countries, the process of abolishing all corporal punishment typically began by legislating against the use of corporal punishment in schools. This was followed by the removal of the parental defence of "lawful correction" or "reasonable chastisement" from relevant criminal codes and finally the introduction of explicit bans on the use of corporal punishment in relevant civil codes. A number of other countries have partially abolished the use of corporal punishment in one or more settings and have expressed a commitment to enacting full prohibition (see Global Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment of Children 2008 for an overview).
Originally posted by BigBrotherDarkness
. . . many kids today are defiant; that find humor in the suffering of others, and seem to lack care for anyone but number one...themselves.
Originally posted by Mary Rose
reply to post by BigBrotherDarkness
We are living in a sick society which is disintegrating before our eyes. The government is corrupt to the core. There is a shadow government that runs the world behind the scenes by way of deception.
Corporal punishment is not the answer. The answer is going to come slowly as the masses wake up to the deceptions of the powers that be and find the wherewithal somehow to collectively stop going along with things in all areas of society that are not in our best interest.