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the criminalized
verb
To make (something) a crime; to make illegal under criminal law; to ban.
Exact(1)
When you view illicit drugs and sex as a vacation from your day-to-day, law-abiding life, it's unlikely that you'll take responsibility for the way you behave towards the criminalized people you hire.
Similar(59)
Obama's distinction between the good, hardworking immigrants and the bad criminals fed the criminalizing stigma attached to immigrants.
"It's not surprising that we're having problems bringing people who use drugs out of the shadows, because there's that complexity of the criminalized people, criminalized substances," MacPherson told VICE.
Before 2013, only three states in the U.S. criminalized the unauthorized distribution of private sexual images.
The Acts criminalized the obstruction of a citizen's voting rights and provided for federal supervision of the electoral process, including voter registration.
Enacted in 2008, the law criminalized the practice of accusing children of witchcraft and imposed stiff penalties for offenders, several of whom have already been prosecuted and jailed.
But the United States criminalized psychedelics in the late 1960s, effectively halting further research exploring psychedelics' medical value.
Although the government criminalized rape in 2005, the problem of impunity still exists, Ms. Mengual said.
"The same goes with santet".
The ACLU issued a statement reiterating its opposition to the Smith Act, because it felt the act criminalized political advocacy.
The state criminalized burning due to concern that fire destroys the island's natural resources and blocks development.
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