The Issue Continuing the theme of development of the human being, we must speak of advocacy and awareness. In the Philippines, overcrowded prisons present countless issues pertaining to advocacy. Pre-dating Durerte’s “War on Drugs”, issues with the country’s incarceration system have only been exacerbated. The Quezon City jail, the largest in the country, is currently occupied at two-thousand percent capacity. Of the four-thousand plus inmates, over sixty percent have been booked for a drug related offense. With few guards, inadequate sleeping quarters, and no justice in sight, the prisons are a dismal place. It is a common story for many families to have a member arrested by the police, sent to prison, and forced to wait over fifteen years for a trial – all the while with the rest of the family not knowing whether the jailed person is even still alive. Such stories can be found in most major reportings, as well as our own organizational history working from within the prison system. With the legal system so bogged-down, there is rarely any readily available justice for those stuck in prisons. As I have previously stated, a majority of those booked have been so due to drug-related offenses. Many others are younger …show more content…
The fields are incredibly harsh work environments, and the value of crop and seed is abusively low (coupled with high demand), largely as a result of the highly controversial Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA). With so much demanded of the small country to export to the U.S., very little land is left for local farmers to actually grow what is required for local families to be sustained and healthy. The kidney failure and obesity epidemics, in El Salvador, are both tied to the harsh working conditions and poor selection of available food,