Unit 4- AC2.2 Flashcards

Discuss the aims of punishments

1
Q

What are the five aims of punishments?

A
  • Rehabilitation
  • Deterrence
  • Retribution
  • Public protection
  • Reparation
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2
Q

Describe retribution

A

Gives criminals a ‘just desert’ as society is morally entitled to take their revenge. Allows society to express moral outrage.
Proportionality is important which leads to a fixed scale of mandatory penalties.

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3
Q

What theories link to retribution?

A
  • Right realism (rational choice theory believes people consciously choose to commit crime and so should be held fully responsible).
  • Durkheim’s functionalist theory (Crime maintains boundaries between good and bad, allowing society to express moral outrage).
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4
Q

What are three criticisms of retribution?

A
  • Offenders deserve mercy or a chance to make amendments
  • Due to fixed tariff, punishment has to be inflicted even when no good will come from it.
  • People disagree which crimes are more serious than others and so have different ideas of what is proportional.
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5
Q

Describe rehabilitation.

A

Idea punishments should change the offender so they live a crime-free life. Uses various treatment programmes to change future behaviour.

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6
Q

Name policies under rehabilitation.

A
  • Education and training programmes
  • Drug treatment and testing orders
  • Anger management
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7
Q

What three theories link to rehabilitation?

A
  • Cogitative ( Faulty thinking leads to crime so CBT changes the way someone thinks)
  • Left realism ( Inequality in society leads to crime so education programmes overcome this)
  • Biochemical (Drugs and alcohol leads to crime so treatment should reduce it.)
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8
Q

What are 4 criticisms of rehabilitaton?

A
  • Limited success as many re-offend (24.3%)
  • Shifts responsibility for offending from the offenders failings.
  • Limited budget and resources so programmes are not carried out effectively.
  • Rehabilitation policies require offenders to want to change their lives.
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9
Q

Describe deterrence.

A

Prevents individuals committing crime using the fear of being caught and punished.

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10
Q

What are the two types of deterrence?

A
  • Individual (stops offenders from re-offending using punishment)
  • General ( Deters the whole of society as public can watch an offender being punished so they understand the consequences)
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11
Q

What is the example of individual deterrence?

A

Margaret Thatcher, 1980, created a new system in Juvenile called the ‘short, sharp shock’ to deter young offenders.

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12
Q

Describe severity verses certainty for deterrence.

A

Severe punishments are unlikely to deter offenders but if they are certain they will be caught and punished, it will be a more effective deterrent.

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13
Q

What two theories link to deterrence?

A
  • Right realism (Rational choice theory. Individuals consider costs and benefits so if the cost was increased, less would be likely to commit)
  • Social learning ( If an offender sees a model being punished, they are less likely to imitate. Links to general deterrence).
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14
Q

What are four criticisms of deterrence?

A
  • No evidence the ‘short,sharp,shock’ works as half of the prisoners re offended in a year.
  • Assumes society is aware of the punishments
  • Assumes offenders act rationally
  • Those who break laws they believe is ‘unjust’ will not be deterred
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15
Q

Describe public protection

A

Punishing offenders to protect the public
Involves incapacitation

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16
Q

What are some examples of policies under public protection?

A
  • Execution
  • Chemical castration
  • Foreign travel bans
  • Curfew and electronic tagging
  • Imprisonment
17
Q

How is the criminal justice act, 2003, linked to public protection?

A

Introduced imprisonment for public protection allowing courts to give indeterminate sentences

18
Q

Link public protection to theories

A
  • Biological. Lombroso believed criminals are biologically determined to commit crimes so cannot be rehabilitated and must be locked away.
  • Right realism. Zero tolerance policing would reduce crime rate as crime is a growing problem
19
Q

What are three criticisms of public protection?

A
  • Leads to long sentences which is costly and considered ‘warehousing’.
  • Doesn’t deal with the cause of crime as it is only a risk management.
  • Unjust as it assumes they will commit a crime in the future so is unethical.
20
Q

Describe reparation

A

Involves offenders making amends and repairing material and social damage.

21
Q

What scheme is involved under reparation?

A

Restorative justice schemes (brings victim and offender together to explain impacts and give opportunities to express remorse and give closure.

22
Q

What are theories linked to reparation?

A
  • Labelling theory. By enabling them to show remorse, it permits reintegration and prevents labelling.
  • Functionalist. Durkheim argues ‘restorative justice’ is essential for the smooth functioning of modern society.
23
Q

What are two criticisms of reparation?

A
  • May not work for all types of offences like sexual crime and murder.
  • Some regard reparation as ‘too soft’ as it lets offenders off lightly.