PROHIBITION OF CORPORAL PUNISHMENT IN INTERNATIONAL LAW: ANALYSIS OF LEGAL DEFENCES AND JUSTIFICATION
Abstract
The effort of international organisationsto prohibit the use of corporal punishment on children has not been without controversies. This study analyses the issues surrounding the prohibition of corporal punishment on minors. One of such issues relates to the ‘reasonable chastisement’defence, anoldlegal justification for applying corporal punishment on a child. Such defence is no longer tenable under the purview of international law. In addition, the lawful use of force for the purpose of correcting a child under the Nigerian Criminal Code, Penal Code and Sharia code respectively is a violation of international human rights law. Researches by international experts have indicated that physical punishment involves the use of corporal punishment. Furthermore, surveys by the United Nations have further proven corporal punishment as the most common form of violence against children.   Hence, the prohibition of corporal punishment under international law aims to protect and promote respect for the human dignity of a child as enshrined under the Convention on the Rights of a child. Corporal punishment as a means of correction no longer holds ground under International human rights Law. Therefore legal reforms should include a creative way of correction that will not violate a child’s human dignity.
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