Abstract

The article examines the legal category of “disobedience to representatives of the administration of a correctional institution.” Group disobedience in the form of strikes, refusal to eat, and acts of autoaggression is analyzed. The article reveals the legal nature and role of the organizer of mass protest actions in places of detention, the causal relationship between the actions of the organizers and the behavior of active participants in malicious violations of punishment. A distinction is made between crimes and disciplinary offenses in the form of organizing groups of convicts aimed at disobeying the administration of a correctional institution and participating in such groups. It is concluded that in any form of legal disobedience there should be no violence or threat of its use, otherwise the illegal behavior of a person can be qualified as disorganization of the activities of institutions that ensure isolation from society.

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