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Prisoner Hunger Strikes - Constitutional Protection for a Fundamental Right

NCJ Number
90039
Journal
American Criminal Law Review Volume: 20 Issue: 4 Dated: (Spring 1983) Pages: 569-598
Author(s)
B K Tagawa
Date Published
1983
Length
30 pages
Annotation
The right of prisoners to conditionally refuse to eat stems from historically recognized doctrines of speech and privacy and should be included in the fundamental rights of individuals.
Abstract
Contemporary doctrine points out that prisoners may no longer be denied substantive constitutional rights held by free citizens merely because they are incarcerated. Legitimate State interests must be marshaled to override these rights. Force-feeding prisoners has a remote relationship to legitimate corrections objectives, but these objectives can be served by less drastic means. Modern constitutional policy mandates that individuals' freedoms remain unless their conduct unduly interferes with the rights of others. Where the rights of others are found to be legitimate, narrowly drawn, and compelling, regulation of constitutionally protected conduct is permissible. Force-feeding a nonconsenting, healthy individual involves violence, however. Asserting a qualified desire to live does not. Violence, even when State-sanctioned, cannot justifiably keep a nonviolent individual from exercising personal beliefs in a nonviolent manner. A total of 144 case notes are provided. (Author summary modified)