Quote:
Originally Posted by Ven
as a misjudgement may lead to a child or a vulnerable person mistreated.....organisations (especially private ones) need to get more involved with former convicts and invest in schemes that don’t prevent them from being included in society.
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One general point and one specific point.
The general point: you interpret "keeping people out" as meaning "stopping convicts reoffending". It can equally validly mean "preventing offending in the first place". Taking just one interpretation is one way of answering the question and allows detailed discussion, but often this can be repetitive or too uncritical; challenging the question, taking two interpretations, allows a broader discussion and allows interesting angles to be taken, or narrowed down. Neither is right, but arguably the latter (and more lateral) is more interesting for the examiner reading script after script?
There is a middle ground, something along the lines of "...the phrase "keeping people out" in the context of this quote can mean both preventing convited offenders from reoffending and also preventing people offending in the first place; it contains ideas of both primary and secondary prevention. I will examine both sides/one side only [delete as appropriate] for the following reasons....". That way you can talk at length about one, and get marks for alluding to the second and for a bit of analysis in terms of why you'll talk about one and not the other. Challenging the question, defining terms, exploiting ambiguities in the quotes, referring to different meanings, discussing the hard logic of the quote etc etc are things that score highly on the analytical essay of the two in Sect 2.
The specific point: children or vulnerable people can be mistreated by those without a criminal record. It's sort of a point of logic in your argument, if you get my drift...
These are small picky points. What you wrote reads well and would score well.