The just society

From Ephemeral Film Wiki
Moving Image:The just society
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The just society is a short film from 1963 released on 16mm. It is held in the IUL Moving Image Archive collection.

This program, a survey of Sweden’s legal system, opens with a dramatization of a court case in which three juveniles are charged with auto theft and criminal assault. The film shows a panel of elected laymen --some trained in social work --who help...

The just society
Release date
1963
Running time
0:29:06
ewid: 616 | Fresh | | step:1 || dopt: {{{dopt}}}

More Details

internal id
71083
Summary
This program, a survey of Sweden’s legal system, opens with a dramatization of a court case in which three juveniles are charged with auto theft and criminal assault. The film shows a panel of elected laymen --some trained in social work --who help the judge reach a decision. (Juries are used only in press libel cases.) These three teenagers are found guilty. The film moves to one of the country’s nine “youth prisons” where young offenders between the ages of 18 and 21 are “re-socialized.” The Swedes believe, the narrator explains, that the work of penologists is rehabilitation, not punishment. Appearing on the program is Alfred Bexelius, ombudsman (or procurator) of civil rights, the special Swedish official who investigates all cases where civil rights may have been violated. Also, commenting on Sweden’s attitudes toward the prevention of crime are Ulla Bergkwist, psychiatrist and head of the youth care center at Roxtuna and Torsten Eriksson, director general of Swedish prisons and well-known penologists.
Physical Format
1 Film (0:29:06)
16mm
IUL Genres
Educational
Historical
Ethnographic
IUL Subject
Sweden--Social life and customs.
Full Original Title
The just society