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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
This article discusses the Brazilian prison system and the challenges posed by social inequality that
affect the prison population, presenting a concise historical context. The work is situated within
the paradoxical context of a country with a Criminal Enforcement Law (LEP) considered modern,
but which maintains a selective, segregating, and punitive model of incarceration. The central
objective of this study is to analyze the contrast between the humanized ideal of the Criminal
Enforcement Law (LEP) and the selective and exclusionary reality of the national prison system. It
seeks to substantiate the social injustices perpetrated in prisons, often through the very
mechanisms of justice. Furthermore, the article aims to discuss the need for transformation of the
prison system, in alignment with the principles of human rights and the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development. The methodology of this study is qualitative and reflective in nature,
delineated from a transdisciplinary approach. The narrative construction permeates a theoretical
review of the legal, social, and ideological aspects of the prison system, with a dialogue between
Law, Social Sciences, Public Health, and Education. The analysis included an examination of the
Criminal Enforcement Law and a historical review from the Penal Code of 1830, in addition to a
critical interpretation of official data and empirical studies. The results indicate institutional
ineffectiveness in Brazilian prisons, operating as the last step in a systematic process of denial of
rights that precedes imprisonment. It is demonstrated that overcrowding, low levels of education,
and racial selectivity characterize the discrepancy between the norm and reality. However, the
study highlights the potential of the Criminal Enforcement Law as an instrument for inducing
humanitarian public policies. The analysis in light of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
reveals that the effectiveness of the law requires integrated actions in health, education, and work,
transforming the prison into a space for citizen reconstruction.
Description
Keywords
Brazilian Prison System Person Deprived of Liberty Criminal Enforcement Law Social Inequality Denial of Rights
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Valentim, J. L. R. S., Azevedo, B., Fernandes, E., Coutinho, K. D., Silva, R., Henriques, S., Romão, M. H., Batista, N. A. N., Coutinho K. D., Valentim, R. A. M., Oliveira, C. A. P., Dias, A. P. (2026). Selective imprisonment in Brasil: a story beyond the walls, Interference Journal, 12(1), 23-59. https://doi.org/10.36557/2009-3578.2026v12n1p23-59
Publisher
Editora BSP (Brazilian Scientific Publications)
