This paper critically explores the relationship between human rights and the rehabilitative purpose of punishment within contemporary criminal justice systems. While international human rights instruments—such as the ICCPR and the Mandela Rules—emphasize the reintegration of offenders as a core objective of incarceration, the practical realization of this principle often remains elusive. Drawing on a critical legal perspective, this study interrogates the extent to which legal systems operationalize rehabilitation as a rights-based imperative, and how structural inequalities, political narratives, and penal ideologies shape its implementation. The paper examines the doctrinal evolution of rehabilitation in comparative jurisdictions and exposes the disjuncture between normative commitments and carceral realities—marked by overcrowding, inadequate support systems, and punitive sentencing regimes. Through engagement with Foucauldian theory, post-colonial critiques, and feminist legal scholarship, the research challenges the assumption that rehabilitation is inherently benevolent or universally accessible. It argues that rehabilitative frameworks, while ostensibly progressive, may reproduce disciplinary control and reinforce societal hierarchies. Ultimately, the study calls for a reimagining of penal reform grounded in dignity, equity, and transformative justice. By situating rehabilitation within a broader human rights discourse, this paper highlights its potential as a genuine vehicle for social reintegration and legal accountability.
Hifajatali Sayyed (Sun,) studied this question.
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