Consultation on the Children (Abolition of Defence of Reasonable Punishment) (Wales) Bill
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Tystiolaeth i’r Pwyllgor Plant, Pobl Ifanc ac Addysg ar gyfer craffu Cyfnod 1 Bil Plant (Diddymu Amddiffyniad Cosb Resymol) (Cymru) |
Evidence submitted to the Children, Young People and Education Committee for Stage 1 scrutiny of the Children (Abolition of Defence of Reasonable Punishment) (Wales) Bill |
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CADRP-190 |
CADRP-190 |
About you
Individual
— No
(we would be grateful if you could keep your answer to around 1000 words)
I reject it because by definition reasonable punishment cannot be culpable. Unreasonable punishment is already covered in law. More to the point is that parents who discipline their children out of love ought not to be criminalised on that account. The move to criminalse parents who use physical punishment appears to be part of a broader trend towards a sanctionless society. As just one element of child training, smacking takes its place alongside other sanctions, if sanctions apply at all. If they do, may they not also be deemed unreasonable under the categories of emtional cruelty or controlling behaviour? The proposal is retrograde and unnecessary under existing law.
(we would be grateful if you could keep your answer to around 1000 words)
No!
(we would be grateful if you could keep your answer to around 1000 words)
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(we would be grateful if you could keep your answer to around 1000 words)
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(we would be grateful if you could keep your answer to around 1000 words)
Yes. It could encourage parents to give up on discipline.
(we would be grateful if you could keep your answer to around 1000 words)
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(we would be grateful if you could keep your answer to around 1000 words)
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