0 present participle of incarcerate --
1 to put or keep someone in prison or in a place used as a prison: --
We were incarcerated in that broken elevator for four hours.
Thousands of dissidents have been interrogated or incarcerated.
But to concentrate on incarcerating damaged and delinquent adolescents in large and soulless institutions, often a long way from their families, is both harmful and inhumane.
Very often that means incarcerating persons for 23 hours a day—consider what that means—for weeks, months or years.
We have to win the battle for convincing the service that what it is about is rehabilitation and not simply incarcerating people.
Does he agree that incarcerating innocent individuals will not solve the many difficult problems of that region?
They are incarcerating people whose quality of life is shameful.
That was supposed to be the main purpose of incarcerating them.
Secondly, it embarks on a new range of non-custodial penalties designed to find methods of awarding punishments to criminals which do not involve incarcerating them.
We should facilitate community care and stop incarcerating people.