Figure 1 shows a conceptual model of these possible links between parental imprisonment and children's internalizing problems.
Offenders were given two months to comply or face excommunication, imprisonment, fines or exile.
Under the 1643 ordinance, sellers, guarantors and buyers in land transactions had all faced imprisonment, and the sellers had also faced subsequent exile.
The power of informal judicial pressure - together with the ominous threat of imprisonment, suspension, and possible deprivation - should not be underestimated.
For one thing, invalidation would seem to be cheaper in that imprisonment is avoided.
Parental imprisonment might also cause children's internalizing problems because of the stigma attached to it.
His body reacts to the imprisonment of his soul.
A total of 1,490 sentences were handed down, including 504 for imprisonment or detention in a reform school.