·
It must involve an unpleasantness to the
victim.
·
It must be for an offense, actual or
supposed.
·
It must be of an offender, actual or supposed
·
It must be the work of personal
agencies; in other words it must not be the natural consequence of an action.
·
It must be imposed by an authority or an
institution against whose rules the offense has been committed… (Banks 2013,
p.114).
When dealing with retribution
it can be argued that punishment benefits not only society, but also criminals.
For example, just as society feels satisfied by paying back criminals, giving
criminals their punishment, offenders benefit by putting right their evil. It
is my opinion that society pays back criminals by retaliation; criminals pay
back society by accepting responsibility through punishment. Which I feel both
paybacks are at the heart of retribution. Retribution has several appealing
qualities. It assumes free will, thereby enhancing individual autonomy. However,
determinists which include most criminologists, reject the free-will assumption
underlying retribution.
Supporters of
prevention argue that prevention looks forward and inflicts pain, not for its
own sake, but to prevent future crime. As I researched some tools on prevention
I discovered that theirs four kinds of prevention. 1. General deterrence, 2.
Special deterrence, 3. Incapacitation, and 4. Rehabilitation (Samaha 2011,
p.24). These four ideas formulate the classical deterrence theory. In other
words these four indicate rational human beings will not commit crimes if they
know that the pain of punishment outweighs the pleasure gained from committing
crimes.
Finally, I believe if
we could obtain empirical support for criminal punishment, deterrence is unjust
because it punishes for example’s sake. I feel punishment should not be a
sacrifice to the common good; it’s only just in my opinion if it’s administered
for the redemption of particular individuals, say the retibutionists. To be clearer
I believe punishment is personal and individual, not general and societal.
Please do not misunderstand me I believe that those who commit crime should be
punish. However, I feel as long as offenders are in fact guilty, punishing them
is personal. It is noteworthy I mention that I believe we live in a country
where it is just to use individual punishment for society’s benefit.
Historically, societies has justified punishment in my opinion on the grounds
of retribution. But, this in my opinion will soon be replaced by rehabilitation
because rehabilitation programs can reform offenders. The “if they knew better
they would do better” theme will soon dominate the reform discussion widely publicized
on the effectiveness of treatment programs.
References:
Banks, C. (2013). Criminal Justices Ethics (3rd ed.) Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publication, Inc.
Samaha, J. (2011). Criminal Law (10th ed.) Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, Cengage Learning
Frederick, your blog stood out to me this week. Retribution and punishment in American are too issues that in my opinion still have a long way to go in dealing with the mentally ill and their inability to reason or know right from wrong . This is part of the reason why “if they knew better they would do better” theme stood out to me.
ReplyDeleteHow do we deal with people who know the punishment is severe but still choose to commit some of the most heinous crimes? Thanks for touching on an often overlooked subject.
Frederick: You have written a thought-provoking blog on the purpose of criminal punishment. Your video on the history of capital punishment was also thought-provoking. I found the quote by the last speaker on the video insightful: "if there is no pain, there is no punishment." Professor Taylor
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