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vankeutta

Vankeutta is a Finnish legal term meaning imprisonment or a prison sentence. It is a central form of punishment in the Finnish criminal justice system and is used for more serious offenses. There are two main forms: unconditional imprisonment (vankeus) and conditional imprisonment (ehdollinen vankeus), the latter combining a prison term with probation and monitoring.

Duration can vary: unconditional imprisonment may be for a fixed term or, in the gravest cases, life

Execution takes place in a prison (vankila) under state supervision. While incarcerated, individuals retain several basic

Relation to other penalties: vankeutta is distinct from pre-trial detention (pidätys), which is deprivation of liberty

imprisonment
(elinkautinen
vankeus).
The
law
also
provides
for
the
possibility
of
release
before
the
full
term
through
parole
or
other
forms
of
early
release,
depending
on
the
offense
and
the
offender’s
behavior
and
rehabilitation
prospects.
rights
and
may
access
legal
aid,
pursue
appeals,
and
participate
in
rehabilitation
programs.
After
serving
a
term
or
upon
conditional
release,
supervision
and
reintegration
measures
are
typically
provided
to
support
a
return
to
society.
during
investigation
or
proceedings.
It
exists
alongside
other
penalties
in
the
Finnish
Penal
Code,
such
as
fines,
community
penalties,
and
conditional
penalties,
reflecting
a
system
oriented
toward
punishment,
deterrence,
public
safety,
and
rehabilitation.