Attitudes to punishment Flashcards

1
Q

What was the purpose of punishment in the Medieval Era?

A
  • Deterrence, retribution and to keep order
  • Keep the punishment public and harsh in
    order to do this. Show justice was being
    done.
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2
Q

Purpose of punishment in the early modern era

A
  • Deterrence, retribution and to keep order
  • Keep the punishment public and harsh in
    order to do this. Show justice was being
    done.
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3
Q

How were prisons used in the early modern era?

A

Prisons were only used to temporarily hold
offenders or debtors.

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4
Q

Attitude change to punishment in the Early Modern Era

A

Some change in attitude came with
Elizabethan Poor Laws where government
set up Houses of Correction.

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5
Q

Changes in attitude in the Industrial Era

A
  • Major change was the introduction of
    transportation and the attitude of
    banishing criminals as well as an
    alternative to the death penalty.
  • Especially as workers were needed for
    the new colony PLUS some felt the
    Bloody Code was unfair but didn’t want
    to let criminals off.
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6
Q

How were prisons used in the Industrial Era?

A

Prisons – increasingly used as Bloody
Code reduced to 5 crimes for death penalty and change in attitude to prison and towards reform

  • Did lead to overcrowding
  • Gaols Act 1823 – improved security and
    sanitation
  • Separate and silent systems introduced
    focus on punishment and reform
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7
Q

Did the silent and separate system and the Gaols Act 1823 work to reform convicts?

A

These did not work and so the Gov
decided to return to deterrence using
harsh methods

1865 Penal Servitude Act – ruled that all
prisoners should experience hard labour,
hard fare and hard board.
* E.g. hard work, bread and water and hard
bed

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8
Q

How did attitudes towards execution change in the industrial era?

A

Attitudes changed and public execution was banned in 1868

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9
Q

How did attitudes towards crime change in the modern era?

A

Attitudes shifted more towards retribution and rehabilitation.

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10
Q

How did the juvenile system change in the modern era?

A

1908: Borstals focused on discipline and authority

First one opened in Kent

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11
Q

What were Borstals designed to do?

A

They were designed to educate and reform young offenders, so inmates had access to education and training courses. There were strict rules in borstals, and until 1962, boys in borstals were whipped.

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12
Q

When were Borstals abolished?

A

1982

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13
Q

What were Borstals replaced with in 1982? And what did it involve?

A

Youth Detention Centres

Which involved much stricter, almost military, discipline. This did not work, and
youth re-offending increased to 75%.

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14
Q

How did corporal and capital punishment attitudes change in the modern era?

A

Capital punishment abolished in 1969

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15
Q

Timothy Evans

A

Evans was hung for the murder of his baby daughter.

There was a lack of forensic proof to confirm this, but he was still given capitol punishment

Later the remains of 6 other women was found in the walls of his Neighbour John Christie.

Evans was wrongly executed and given a posthumous pardon in 1966.

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16
Q

Derek Bentley

A

Wrongly convicted for the murder of a police officer during a theft.

But he was hung in Wandsworth Prison in 1953

17
Q

Ruth Ellis

A

Last woman to be executed in the UK.

She was convicted for killing her husband after he had numerous affairs and assaulted her.

She was hung in 1955

18
Q

When did Flogging on prisoners end?

A

1949

19
Q

What is flogging?

A

a beating administered with a whip or rod, with blows commonly directed to the person’s back

20
Q

How did the separate system work?

A

Individual cells
Masks covering people’s eyes
Couldn’t see anyone apart from the Chaplain
Only let out of their cells for exercise or Church.

21
Q

How did the silent system work?

A

Had to do meaningless labour in silence

22
Q

Example of meaningless labour undertaken in the silent system

A

Picking tar off a rope
The Crank (turning a handle 1000 times)

23
Q

What were the key findings of the Gladstone Committee in 1895?

A

Long periods of isolation does not reform convicts, instead had a negative impact on mental health

Juveniles’ should not be subject to harsh treatment

Younger prisoners should be given education and training in prison to given them worthwhile skills

24
Q

Prison Act 1898

A

In response to the Gladstone Committee findings

  • Time in isolation to be reduced
  • More free time to communicate w other prisoners
  • Unproductive labour abolished
  • Borstal’s to open for young offenders
25
Q

When was the silent system abolished?

A

1923

26
Q

When was capital punishment abolished ?

A

Murder Act 1965

27
Q

What was the age of criminal responsibility by the mid 20th century ?

A

14 years old

28
Q

What was the age of criminal responsibility by 2017 ?

A

10 years old

29
Q

When was the age of criminal responsibility introduced ?

A

1908