SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 31
Punishment! Forms?
Is it just an expensive way of
making bad people worse?
There are FOUR main justifications for
punishment:
• A DETERRRENCE
Set an example to deter others
• B REHABILITATION
Reform offenders so they come out as good
citizens who do not re-offend
• C INCAPACTITATION
Take people out of circulation so they can’t harm
the public
• D RETRIBUTION
Society’s revenge, getting our own back, payback
STATEMENT
1 Punish and discourage

2 Reforming or changing offenders for the
better

3 Vengeance and pay-back.

4 Revenge! Society getting its own back on
those who do wrong and can’ t behave
themselves
5 Education and training for prisoners so
when they are released from prison they can
earn an honest living
6 Taking offenders out of circulation –
removing criminals from society protects the
public.

JUSTIFICA
TION

STATEMENT
7 The ‘short, sharp, shock’ regimes used by
Thatcher’s 1980s conservative governments
for young offenders
8 Remove the offender’s capacity to offend
again by locking them up. This is a means to
an end – an instrumental justification for
punishment.
9 An expressive rather than an instrumental
justification for punishment – the expression
of society’s outrage.
10 Locking away the dangerous, the violent
and the light-fingered means that lawabiding citizens can go about their business
without fear of being attacked or robbed.
11 Anger management for violent offenders,
drug counselling for substance abusers.....
12 Making an example of offenders will put
off others who may consider doing similar
acts.

JUSTIFIC
ATION
STATEMENT

JUSTIFICA
TION

STATEMENT

JUSTIFIC
ATION

1 Punish and discourage

A

A

2 Reforming or changing offenders for the
better

B

7 The ‘short, sharp, shock’ regimes used by
Thatcher’s 1980s conservative governments
for young offenders
8 Remove the offender’s capacity to offend
again by locking them up. This is a means to
an end – an instrumental justification for
punishment.

3 Vengeance and pay-back.

D

4 Revenge! Society getting its own back on
those who do wrong and can’ t behave
themselves

D

5 Education and training for prisoners so
B
when they are released from prison they can
earn an honest living
6 Taking offenders out of circulation –
C
removing criminals from society protects the
public.

C

9 An expressive rather than an instrumental D
justification for punishment – the expression
of society’s outrage.
10 Locking away the dangerous, the violent C
and the light-fingered means that lawabiding citizens can go about their business
without fear of being attacked or robbed.
11 Anger management for violent offenders, B
drug counselling for substance abusers.....
12 Making an example of offenders will put
off others who may consider doing similar
acts.

A
Sociological Perspectives on Punishment
• Sociologists agree that all societies need
to impose control on their members to
ensure stability - punishment is one way of
doing this
• Sociologists are interested in various
aspects of punishment:
What is the relationship between
punishment and society?
What does punishment do?
Why does its form vary over time?
Why has punishment changed
over the years?
Sociological Perspectives on
Punishment – consider 3
• FUNCTIONALISTS
• MARXISTS
• FOUCAULT
GROUP

TOPIC

1

FUNCTIONALISTS

1 TRADITIONAL SOCIETIES

2

FUNCTIONALISTS

2 MODERN SOCIETIES

3

MARXISTS

1 PRE-CAPITALIST SOCIETIES (UP TO C18TH)

4

MARXISTS

2 CAPITALIST SOCIETIES (AFTER C18TH)

5

FOUCAULT

1 SOVEREIGN POWER

6

FOUCAULT

2 DISCIPLINARY POWER
Functionalism: Durkheim
• function of punishment is to uphold
social solidarity, reinforce shared
values, strengthen the collective
conscience
• This function is performed differently in
different types of society
1 TRADITIONAL SOCIETIES
• Use Retributive justice (getting your
own back) – because the collective
conscience is so strong in these type of
societies when people offend it the
reaction is swift and vengeful as a means
of repressing the wrongdoer. Punishment
is severe and cruel and its motivation
purely expressive e.g. stocks, hangings…
2 MODERN SOCIETIES
• Use Restitutive justice (restoring what is lost) –
crime damages the interdependence between
individuals so this needs to be repaired and restored
to the pre-offence state of affairs. Punishment here
is restitutive, it takes an instrumental role of
restoring society’s equilibrium, e.g. through
compensation.
• Nevertheless even here punishment has an
expressive element – it expresses collective
emotions e.g. US triumphalism after killing Bin
Laden.
Functionalism: Evaluation (A02)
• Distinction between retributive justice in
traditional societies and restitutive justice
in modern societies not so clear cut e.g. in
traditional societies blood feuds were
sometimes settled by compensation rather
than by execution or murder. Also still an
expressive role of punishment today.
Marxism
• For Marxists the function of punishment is to
maintain the existing social order (capitalism
and the power of the ruling class). Part of the
REPRESSIVE STATE APPARATUS
(Althusser).
• E.P Thompson (1977): In the 18th century
punishments such as hanging, and
transportation to the colonies for theft and
poaching were part of the ‘rule of terror’ by
the aristocracy over the poor.
Marxism
• Rusche & Kirchheimer (1939) argue that each type of
economy has its own corresponding penal system. For
example money fines are impossible without a money
economy. Under capitalism imprisonment became the
dominant form of punishment because the capitalist
economy is based on the exploitation of wage labour.
• Melossi & Pavarini (1981) argue that imprisonment
reflects or corresponds to capitalist relations of
production:
CAPITALISM
Puts a price on worker’s time
Factories use strict discipline

PRISONS IN CAPITALIST SOCIETIES
Prisoners ‘do time’ to ‘pay’ for their crime or ‘repay
a debt to society’.
Prisons use strict discipline, subordination and loss
of liberty
Marxism: Evaluation
1 Fails to explain the differing experiences
of women and ethnic groups in the prison
system.
2 Too deterministic and simplistic to
suggest that punishment is directly linked
to the economic base of society.
Foucault – birth of the prison
Foucault
• Michel Foucault’s Discipline and Punish
opens with a striking contrast between two
different forms of punishment, which he
sees as examples of sovereign power
and disciplinary power.
2 types of power in different periods
• Sovereign power was typical of the period
before the 19th century, when the monarch had
power over people and their bodies. Inflicting
punishment on the body was the means of
asserting control. Punishment was a spectacle
such as public execution.
• Disciplinary power becomes dominant from the
19th century. In this form of control, a new system
of discipline seeks to govern not just the body
but also the mind or ‘soul’. It does so through
surveillance.
The Panopticon
• Foucault demonstrates his point with the panopticon, a
prison which was designed so that the prisoners could
be observed by the guards at all times. Because they
might be watched the prisoners behaved themselves at
all times so the surveillance turns into self-surveillance/
self-discipline.
• Foucault argued that the panopticon was one of a range
of institutions that, from the 19th century, increasingly
began to subject individuals to disciplinary power through
self-surveillance. Other institutions include mental
asylums, work houses, factories and schools.
The
Panopticon
Earlier forms of
punishment!
The
Panopticon
CCTV

Most modern form of
surveillance, now
appearing in classrooms
across the UK!
Foucault
• To Foucault disciplinary power has
infiltrated all parts of society, even into the
human ‘soul’. Therefore according to
Foucault this change in the form of
punishment from sovereign to disciplinary
power in the penal system tells us how
power operates in societies as a whole.
Foucault: Evaluation
• 1 The shift from physical punishment to
imprisonment is less clear than he
suggests.
• 2 Expressive aspects of punishment
ignored.
• 3 He exaggerates the extent of control that
the state has over individuals. Goffman
(1962) showed how inmates can resist
controls in prison and mental hospitals
Changing Role of Prisons
Pre-industrial society had a wide range of
punishments – banishment,
transportation, execution, ducking stools,
flogging…
Until the 18th century prison was mainly
used for holding offenders prior to
punishment. Only following the
Enlightenment did prison come to be seen
as a form of punishment in itself – a place
of ‘reform’, for example through hard
labour or religious instruction
Imprisonment Today
• In the UK the death penalty was ended in 1998 although
the last hanging was in 1964
• Life imprisonment is considered the most severe form of
punishment
• Not proved an effective form of rehabilitation – recidivism
(re-offending) currently stands at 60-70% of offenders
• However bang ‘em policies/tougher sentences have
proved an election vote winner since the 1980s – known
as ‘populist punitiveness’
• As a result the prison population has continued to rise around 84,000 in 2013. Overcrowded prisons/staff
shortages are now seen as a problem. A ‘riot’ in
Maidstone prison in October 2013 illustrates this
Imprisonment Today
• The UK imprisons a higher proportion of its population
than anywhere else in Western Europe – around 150 for
every 100,000 of population. However in the US the
figure is 5 times higher at around 750 for every 100,000
of population.
• Most of the UK prison population is male, around 5% are
female. As we know ethnic minorities are overrepresented
Prisons in the US: An era of mass incarceration?
• Rising numbers of prisoners in the US (and to a certain
extent in the UK) led Garland (2001) to call the
noughties and an era of mass incarceration, for
example there are over 1 million black men in prison in
the US.
• Downes (2001) argues this has an ideological function –
the US prison system soaks up 30-40% of the
unemployed making capitalism seem more successful
• Garland argues it is due to the rise of control/get tough
policies over the old penal welfarism (prison is there to
rehabilitate)
• Simon (2001) argues that prisons are used to wage war
on drugs – ½ million of the US prison population are
imprisoned for drugs offences.
Transcarceration
• Sociologists have also identified a trend to
transcarceration (individuals get locked into a
cycle of control shifting between different
carceral agencies – care, young offenders
institution, adult prison, mental hospital….)
• This might be due to the fact that the boundaries
between the CJS and welfare agencies are
blurring, welfare services increasingly being
given crime control roles and sharing information
(multi-agency idea of the Left Realists)
Alternatives to Prison
• At one time the major goal with young offenders was
‘diversion’ – divert them away from contact with the
CJS to avoid the self-fulfilling prophecy which can turn
them into hardened criminals. Welfare and treatment
ideas meant that non-custodial community based
controls were used e.g. probation.
• The number of community based controls have risen in
recent years – now have tagging, curfews, community
service…
• However the numbers actually in custody have been
rising especially among the young
Stan Cohen (2003)
• Argues that the growth of community controls has simply
cast the net of control over MORE people. Using Foucault’s
ideas argues that the increased range of sanctions
available led to the following:
Penetration: law now penetrates much deeper into society
Size and Density: sheer scope of activities: control now
on massive scale
Identity and Visibility: control and punishment used to be
obvious and public but now more subtle forms e.g. CCTV,
tagging, curfews often privatised now.
Far from diverting the young away from the CJS these
community controls may just divert them into it.
Perspective

Functionalism

Marxism

Foucault

Era of punishment 1

Era of punishment 2

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Was ist angesagt?

Social control theory
Social control theorySocial control theory
Social control theory
rplatos
 
The Classical School of Criminology
The Classical School of CriminologyThe Classical School of Criminology
The Classical School of Criminology
Jwooten2
 
7 MEDIA AND CRIME POWERPOINT
7 MEDIA AND CRIME POWERPOINT7 MEDIA AND CRIME POWERPOINT
7 MEDIA AND CRIME POWERPOINT
mattyp99
 
Biological Theories of Crime
Biological Theories of CrimeBiological Theories of Crime
Biological Theories of Crime
knoxmodernstudies
 
Concept of probation and parole a critique
Concept of probation and parole  a critiqueConcept of probation and parole  a critique
Concept of probation and parole a critique
Vinaya Joseph
 

Was ist angesagt? (20)

Labelling Theory
Labelling  TheoryLabelling  Theory
Labelling Theory
 
Capital punishment
Capital punishmentCapital punishment
Capital punishment
 
Social control theory
Social control theorySocial control theory
Social control theory
 
The Elements of a Crime
The Elements of a CrimeThe Elements of a Crime
The Elements of a Crime
 
Marxism On Crime and Deviance
Marxism On Crime and DevianceMarxism On Crime and Deviance
Marxism On Crime and Deviance
 
The Classical School of Criminology
The Classical School of CriminologyThe Classical School of Criminology
The Classical School of Criminology
 
Chapter 13
Chapter 13Chapter 13
Chapter 13
 
The Marxist Theory of Criminology
The Marxist Theory of CriminologyThe Marxist Theory of Criminology
The Marxist Theory of Criminology
 
C2 Anomie
C2 AnomieC2 Anomie
C2 Anomie
 
Crime and deviance
Crime and devianceCrime and deviance
Crime and deviance
 
6.1 categories of international crime
6.1 categories of international crime6.1 categories of international crime
6.1 categories of international crime
 
7 MEDIA AND CRIME POWERPOINT
7 MEDIA AND CRIME POWERPOINT7 MEDIA AND CRIME POWERPOINT
7 MEDIA AND CRIME POWERPOINT
 
Capital punishment
Capital punishmentCapital punishment
Capital punishment
 
sociological theories of crime.pptx
sociological theories of crime.pptxsociological theories of crime.pptx
sociological theories of crime.pptx
 
Biological Theories of Crime
Biological Theories of CrimeBiological Theories of Crime
Biological Theories of Crime
 
Types of Crime
 Types of Crime  Types of Crime
Types of Crime
 
Juvenile Justice System
Juvenile Justice SystemJuvenile Justice System
Juvenile Justice System
 
Concept of probation and parole a critique
Concept of probation and parole  a critiqueConcept of probation and parole  a critique
Concept of probation and parole a critique
 
Criminology ppt by_waseem_i._khan
Criminology ppt by_waseem_i._khanCriminology ppt by_waseem_i._khan
Criminology ppt by_waseem_i._khan
 
Labelling theories of Crime
Labelling theories of CrimeLabelling theories of Crime
Labelling theories of Crime
 

Ähnlich wie 9 Punishment: POWERPOINT

Presentatie Do 1e Ronde
Presentatie Do 1e RondePresentatie Do 1e Ronde
Presentatie Do 1e Ronde
Mark de Haan
 
9 Punishment HANDOUT
9 Punishment HANDOUT9 Punishment HANDOUT
9 Punishment HANDOUT
mattyp99
 
9 Control & Punishment BOOKLET
9 Control & Punishment BOOKLET9 Control & Punishment BOOKLET
9 Control & Punishment BOOKLET
mattyp99
 
Politics, Power and Resistance: Continuos Analytical Reflection
Politics, Power and Resistance: Continuos Analytical Reflection Politics, Power and Resistance: Continuos Analytical Reflection
Politics, Power and Resistance: Continuos Analytical Reflection
rachelizabethx
 

Ähnlich wie 9 Punishment: POWERPOINT (20)

Treatment or punishment
Treatment or punishmentTreatment or punishment
Treatment or punishment
 
Conservatism
Conservatism Conservatism
Conservatism
 
Presentatie Do 1e Ronde
Presentatie Do 1e RondePresentatie Do 1e Ronde
Presentatie Do 1e Ronde
 
9 Punishment HANDOUT
9 Punishment HANDOUT9 Punishment HANDOUT
9 Punishment HANDOUT
 
Correctional setting in social work
Correctional setting in social workCorrectional setting in social work
Correctional setting in social work
 
Essay Corrections
Essay CorrectionsEssay Corrections
Essay Corrections
 
Correctional Administration
Correctional AdministrationCorrectional Administration
Correctional Administration
 
ca1-200508085921 (2).pdf sksksnsbsksjnbnbvhjkkk
ca1-200508085921 (2).pdf sksksnsbsksjnbnbvhjkkkca1-200508085921 (2).pdf sksksnsbsksjnbnbvhjkkk
ca1-200508085921 (2).pdf sksksnsbsksjnbnbvhjkkk
 
CHAPTER 5 - DISS
CHAPTER 5 - DISSCHAPTER 5 - DISS
CHAPTER 5 - DISS
 
IMPACT OF ISLAM AS A SOCIAL TOOL FOR REFORMING INMATES: A CASE STUDY OF IFE P...
IMPACT OF ISLAM AS A SOCIAL TOOL FOR REFORMING INMATES: A CASE STUDY OF IFE P...IMPACT OF ISLAM AS A SOCIAL TOOL FOR REFORMING INMATES: A CASE STUDY OF IFE P...
IMPACT OF ISLAM AS A SOCIAL TOOL FOR REFORMING INMATES: A CASE STUDY OF IFE P...
 
9 Control & Punishment BOOKLET
9 Control & Punishment BOOKLET9 Control & Punishment BOOKLET
9 Control & Punishment BOOKLET
 
Criminology Theories
Criminology TheoriesCriminology Theories
Criminology Theories
 
AQA A2 SCLY4 sociology complete revision
AQA A2 SCLY4 sociology complete revisionAQA A2 SCLY4 sociology complete revision
AQA A2 SCLY4 sociology complete revision
 
CHAPTER 3 BE
CHAPTER 3 BECHAPTER 3 BE
CHAPTER 3 BE
 
Political ideologies
Political ideologiesPolitical ideologies
Political ideologies
 
Understanding Human Society Powerpoint Presentation
Understanding Human Society Powerpoint PresentationUnderstanding Human Society Powerpoint Presentation
Understanding Human Society Powerpoint Presentation
 
Social stratification - class notes from Dr. Xena LCH
Social stratification - class notes from Dr. Xena LCHSocial stratification - class notes from Dr. Xena LCH
Social stratification - class notes from Dr. Xena LCH
 
Politics, Power and Resistance: Continuos Analytical Reflection
Politics, Power and Resistance: Continuos Analytical Reflection Politics, Power and Resistance: Continuos Analytical Reflection
Politics, Power and Resistance: Continuos Analytical Reflection
 
Tshepo Madlingozi: 20 Years of TRC - TAKING STOCK OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN TRUTH ...
Tshepo Madlingozi: 20 Years of TRC - TAKING STOCK OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN TRUTH ...Tshepo Madlingozi: 20 Years of TRC - TAKING STOCK OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN TRUTH ...
Tshepo Madlingozi: 20 Years of TRC - TAKING STOCK OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN TRUTH ...
 
Tshepo Madlingozi: 20 Years of TRC - TAKING STOCK OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN TRUTH ...
Tshepo Madlingozi: 20 Years of TRC - TAKING STOCK OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN TRUTH ...Tshepo Madlingozi: 20 Years of TRC - TAKING STOCK OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN TRUTH ...
Tshepo Madlingozi: 20 Years of TRC - TAKING STOCK OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN TRUTH ...
 

Mehr von mattyp99

NEO MARXISM and RELIGION
NEO MARXISM and RELIGIONNEO MARXISM and RELIGION
NEO MARXISM and RELIGION
mattyp99
 
Values: Handout Booklet
Values: Handout BookletValues: Handout Booklet
Values: Handout Booklet
mattyp99
 
11 Functionalism: Cloze test exercise solution
11 Functionalism: Cloze test exercise   solution11 Functionalism: Cloze test exercise   solution
11 Functionalism: Cloze test exercise solution
mattyp99
 
Info functionalism from sociology a level theory and methods 9 3-10
Info functionalism from sociology a level theory and methods 9 3-10Info functionalism from sociology a level theory and methods 9 3-10
Info functionalism from sociology a level theory and methods 9 3-10
mattyp99
 
Functionalism: Cloze test exercise
Functionalism: Cloze test exerciseFunctionalism: Cloze test exercise
Functionalism: Cloze test exercise
mattyp99
 
Functionalism work sheet
Functionalism work sheetFunctionalism work sheet
Functionalism work sheet
mattyp99
 
Durkheim and Suicide
Durkheim and SuicideDurkheim and Suicide
Durkheim and Suicide
mattyp99
 
Suicide: Douglas' Interpretivist Approach
Suicide: Douglas' Interpretivist ApproachSuicide: Douglas' Interpretivist Approach
Suicide: Douglas' Interpretivist Approach
mattyp99
 
Suicide: Atkinson's Ethnomethodological Approach
Suicide: Atkinson's Ethnomethodological ApproachSuicide: Atkinson's Ethnomethodological Approach
Suicide: Atkinson's Ethnomethodological Approach
mattyp99
 
9 Prisons in the United States
9 Prisons in the United States9 Prisons in the United States
9 Prisons in the United States
mattyp99
 
9 Punishment: Four reasons for sending people to prison
9 Punishment: Four reasons for sending people to prison9 Punishment: Four reasons for sending people to prison
9 Punishment: Four reasons for sending people to prison
mattyp99
 
9 Painter Farrington1999 street lighting study: SITUATIONAL CRIME PREVENTION
9 Painter Farrington1999 street lighting study: SITUATIONAL CRIME PREVENTION9 Painter Farrington1999 street lighting study: SITUATIONAL CRIME PREVENTION
9 Painter Farrington1999 street lighting study: SITUATIONAL CRIME PREVENTION
mattyp99
 
9 Social Control: POWERPOINT
9 Social Control: POWERPOINT9 Social Control: POWERPOINT
9 Social Control: POWERPOINT
mattyp99
 
9 Social Control POWERPOINT
9 Social Control POWERPOINT9 Social Control POWERPOINT
9 Social Control POWERPOINT
mattyp99
 
9 Pre-School Perry Project
9 Pre-School Perry Project9 Pre-School Perry Project
9 Pre-School Perry Project
mattyp99
 
8 The Social Conditions of State Crime HANDOUT
8 The Social Conditions of State Crime HANDOUT8 The Social Conditions of State Crime HANDOUT
8 The Social Conditions of State Crime HANDOUT
mattyp99
 
Gendered division of labour essay
Gendered division of labour essayGendered division of labour essay
Gendered division of labour essay
mattyp99
 
Gendered division of labour essay
Gendered division of labour essayGendered division of labour essay
Gendered division of labour essay
mattyp99
 
Crime Prevention and Control - 3 Different Approaches
Crime Prevention and Control - 3 Different ApproachesCrime Prevention and Control - 3 Different Approaches
Crime Prevention and Control - 3 Different Approaches
mattyp99
 
8 Green Crime:
8 Green Crime: 8 Green Crime:
8 Green Crime:
mattyp99
 

Mehr von mattyp99 (20)

NEO MARXISM and RELIGION
NEO MARXISM and RELIGIONNEO MARXISM and RELIGION
NEO MARXISM and RELIGION
 
Values: Handout Booklet
Values: Handout BookletValues: Handout Booklet
Values: Handout Booklet
 
11 Functionalism: Cloze test exercise solution
11 Functionalism: Cloze test exercise   solution11 Functionalism: Cloze test exercise   solution
11 Functionalism: Cloze test exercise solution
 
Info functionalism from sociology a level theory and methods 9 3-10
Info functionalism from sociology a level theory and methods 9 3-10Info functionalism from sociology a level theory and methods 9 3-10
Info functionalism from sociology a level theory and methods 9 3-10
 
Functionalism: Cloze test exercise
Functionalism: Cloze test exerciseFunctionalism: Cloze test exercise
Functionalism: Cloze test exercise
 
Functionalism work sheet
Functionalism work sheetFunctionalism work sheet
Functionalism work sheet
 
Durkheim and Suicide
Durkheim and SuicideDurkheim and Suicide
Durkheim and Suicide
 
Suicide: Douglas' Interpretivist Approach
Suicide: Douglas' Interpretivist ApproachSuicide: Douglas' Interpretivist Approach
Suicide: Douglas' Interpretivist Approach
 
Suicide: Atkinson's Ethnomethodological Approach
Suicide: Atkinson's Ethnomethodological ApproachSuicide: Atkinson's Ethnomethodological Approach
Suicide: Atkinson's Ethnomethodological Approach
 
9 Prisons in the United States
9 Prisons in the United States9 Prisons in the United States
9 Prisons in the United States
 
9 Punishment: Four reasons for sending people to prison
9 Punishment: Four reasons for sending people to prison9 Punishment: Four reasons for sending people to prison
9 Punishment: Four reasons for sending people to prison
 
9 Painter Farrington1999 street lighting study: SITUATIONAL CRIME PREVENTION
9 Painter Farrington1999 street lighting study: SITUATIONAL CRIME PREVENTION9 Painter Farrington1999 street lighting study: SITUATIONAL CRIME PREVENTION
9 Painter Farrington1999 street lighting study: SITUATIONAL CRIME PREVENTION
 
9 Social Control: POWERPOINT
9 Social Control: POWERPOINT9 Social Control: POWERPOINT
9 Social Control: POWERPOINT
 
9 Social Control POWERPOINT
9 Social Control POWERPOINT9 Social Control POWERPOINT
9 Social Control POWERPOINT
 
9 Pre-School Perry Project
9 Pre-School Perry Project9 Pre-School Perry Project
9 Pre-School Perry Project
 
8 The Social Conditions of State Crime HANDOUT
8 The Social Conditions of State Crime HANDOUT8 The Social Conditions of State Crime HANDOUT
8 The Social Conditions of State Crime HANDOUT
 
Gendered division of labour essay
Gendered division of labour essayGendered division of labour essay
Gendered division of labour essay
 
Gendered division of labour essay
Gendered division of labour essayGendered division of labour essay
Gendered division of labour essay
 
Crime Prevention and Control - 3 Different Approaches
Crime Prevention and Control - 3 Different ApproachesCrime Prevention and Control - 3 Different Approaches
Crime Prevention and Control - 3 Different Approaches
 
8 Green Crime:
8 Green Crime: 8 Green Crime:
8 Green Crime:
 

KĂźrzlich hochgeladen

The basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptxThe basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptx
heathfieldcps1
 
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please PractiseSpellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
AnaAcapella
 

KĂźrzlich hochgeladen (20)

SKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptx
SKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptxSKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptx
SKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptx
 
Graduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English
Graduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - EnglishGraduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English
Graduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English
 
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POS
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POSHow to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POS
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POS
 
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
 
Understanding Accommodations and Modifications
Understanding  Accommodations and ModificationsUnderstanding  Accommodations and Modifications
Understanding Accommodations and Modifications
 
Sensory_Experience_and_Emotional_Resonance_in_Gabriel_Okaras_The_Piano_and_Th...
Sensory_Experience_and_Emotional_Resonance_in_Gabriel_Okaras_The_Piano_and_Th...Sensory_Experience_and_Emotional_Resonance_in_Gabriel_Okaras_The_Piano_and_Th...
Sensory_Experience_and_Emotional_Resonance_in_Gabriel_Okaras_The_Piano_and_Th...
 
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The BasicsIntroduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
 
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdfKey note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
 
How to Give a Domain for a Field in Odoo 17
How to Give a Domain for a Field in Odoo 17How to Give a Domain for a Field in Odoo 17
How to Give a Domain for a Field in Odoo 17
 
The basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptxThe basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptx
 
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptxBasic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
 
TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...
TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...
TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...
 
REMIFENTANIL: An Ultra short acting opioid.pptx
REMIFENTANIL: An Ultra short acting opioid.pptxREMIFENTANIL: An Ultra short acting opioid.pptx
REMIFENTANIL: An Ultra short acting opioid.pptx
 
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdfUGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
 
HMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptx
HMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptxHMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptx
HMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptx
 
2024-NATIONAL-LEARNING-CAMP-AND-OTHER.pptx
2024-NATIONAL-LEARNING-CAMP-AND-OTHER.pptx2024-NATIONAL-LEARNING-CAMP-AND-OTHER.pptx
2024-NATIONAL-LEARNING-CAMP-AND-OTHER.pptx
 
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptxUnit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
 
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please PractiseSpellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
 
Wellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptx
Wellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptxWellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptx
Wellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptx
 
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptxHMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
 

9 Punishment: POWERPOINT

  • 1. Punishment! Forms? Is it just an expensive way of making bad people worse?
  • 2. There are FOUR main justifications for punishment: • A DETERRRENCE Set an example to deter others • B REHABILITATION Reform offenders so they come out as good citizens who do not re-offend • C INCAPACTITATION Take people out of circulation so they can’t harm the public • D RETRIBUTION Society’s revenge, getting our own back, payback
  • 3. STATEMENT 1 Punish and discourage 2 Reforming or changing offenders for the better 3 Vengeance and pay-back. 4 Revenge! Society getting its own back on those who do wrong and can’ t behave themselves 5 Education and training for prisoners so when they are released from prison they can earn an honest living 6 Taking offenders out of circulation – removing criminals from society protects the public. JUSTIFICA TION STATEMENT 7 The ‘short, sharp, shock’ regimes used by Thatcher’s 1980s conservative governments for young offenders 8 Remove the offender’s capacity to offend again by locking them up. This is a means to an end – an instrumental justification for punishment. 9 An expressive rather than an instrumental justification for punishment – the expression of society’s outrage. 10 Locking away the dangerous, the violent and the light-fingered means that lawabiding citizens can go about their business without fear of being attacked or robbed. 11 Anger management for violent offenders, drug counselling for substance abusers..... 12 Making an example of offenders will put off others who may consider doing similar acts. JUSTIFIC ATION
  • 4. STATEMENT JUSTIFICA TION STATEMENT JUSTIFIC ATION 1 Punish and discourage A A 2 Reforming or changing offenders for the better B 7 The ‘short, sharp, shock’ regimes used by Thatcher’s 1980s conservative governments for young offenders 8 Remove the offender’s capacity to offend again by locking them up. This is a means to an end – an instrumental justification for punishment. 3 Vengeance and pay-back. D 4 Revenge! Society getting its own back on those who do wrong and can’ t behave themselves D 5 Education and training for prisoners so B when they are released from prison they can earn an honest living 6 Taking offenders out of circulation – C removing criminals from society protects the public. C 9 An expressive rather than an instrumental D justification for punishment – the expression of society’s outrage. 10 Locking away the dangerous, the violent C and the light-fingered means that lawabiding citizens can go about their business without fear of being attacked or robbed. 11 Anger management for violent offenders, B drug counselling for substance abusers..... 12 Making an example of offenders will put off others who may consider doing similar acts. A
  • 5. Sociological Perspectives on Punishment • Sociologists agree that all societies need to impose control on their members to ensure stability - punishment is one way of doing this • Sociologists are interested in various aspects of punishment: What is the relationship between punishment and society? What does punishment do? Why does its form vary over time?
  • 6. Why has punishment changed over the years?
  • 7. Sociological Perspectives on Punishment – consider 3 • FUNCTIONALISTS • MARXISTS • FOUCAULT GROUP TOPIC 1 FUNCTIONALISTS 1 TRADITIONAL SOCIETIES 2 FUNCTIONALISTS 2 MODERN SOCIETIES 3 MARXISTS 1 PRE-CAPITALIST SOCIETIES (UP TO C18TH) 4 MARXISTS 2 CAPITALIST SOCIETIES (AFTER C18TH) 5 FOUCAULT 1 SOVEREIGN POWER 6 FOUCAULT 2 DISCIPLINARY POWER
  • 8. Functionalism: Durkheim • function of punishment is to uphold social solidarity, reinforce shared values, strengthen the collective conscience • This function is performed differently in different types of society
  • 9. 1 TRADITIONAL SOCIETIES • Use Retributive justice (getting your own back) – because the collective conscience is so strong in these type of societies when people offend it the reaction is swift and vengeful as a means of repressing the wrongdoer. Punishment is severe and cruel and its motivation purely expressive e.g. stocks, hangings…
  • 10. 2 MODERN SOCIETIES • Use Restitutive justice (restoring what is lost) – crime damages the interdependence between individuals so this needs to be repaired and restored to the pre-offence state of affairs. Punishment here is restitutive, it takes an instrumental role of restoring society’s equilibrium, e.g. through compensation. • Nevertheless even here punishment has an expressive element – it expresses collective emotions e.g. US triumphalism after killing Bin Laden.
  • 11. Functionalism: Evaluation (A02) • Distinction between retributive justice in traditional societies and restitutive justice in modern societies not so clear cut e.g. in traditional societies blood feuds were sometimes settled by compensation rather than by execution or murder. Also still an expressive role of punishment today.
  • 12. Marxism • For Marxists the function of punishment is to maintain the existing social order (capitalism and the power of the ruling class). Part of the REPRESSIVE STATE APPARATUS (Althusser). • E.P Thompson (1977): In the 18th century punishments such as hanging, and transportation to the colonies for theft and poaching were part of the ‘rule of terror’ by the aristocracy over the poor.
  • 13. Marxism • Rusche & Kirchheimer (1939) argue that each type of economy has its own corresponding penal system. For example money fines are impossible without a money economy. Under capitalism imprisonment became the dominant form of punishment because the capitalist economy is based on the exploitation of wage labour. • Melossi & Pavarini (1981) argue that imprisonment reflects or corresponds to capitalist relations of production: CAPITALISM Puts a price on worker’s time Factories use strict discipline PRISONS IN CAPITALIST SOCIETIES Prisoners ‘do time’ to ‘pay’ for their crime or ‘repay a debt to society’. Prisons use strict discipline, subordination and loss of liberty
  • 14. Marxism: Evaluation 1 Fails to explain the differing experiences of women and ethnic groups in the prison system. 2 Too deterministic and simplistic to suggest that punishment is directly linked to the economic base of society.
  • 15. Foucault – birth of the prison
  • 16. Foucault • Michel Foucault’s Discipline and Punish opens with a striking contrast between two different forms of punishment, which he sees as examples of sovereign power and disciplinary power.
  • 17. 2 types of power in different periods • Sovereign power was typical of the period before the 19th century, when the monarch had power over people and their bodies. Inflicting punishment on the body was the means of asserting control. Punishment was a spectacle such as public execution. • Disciplinary power becomes dominant from the 19th century. In this form of control, a new system of discipline seeks to govern not just the body but also the mind or ‘soul’. It does so through surveillance.
  • 18. The Panopticon • Foucault demonstrates his point with the panopticon, a prison which was designed so that the prisoners could be observed by the guards at all times. Because they might be watched the prisoners behaved themselves at all times so the surveillance turns into self-surveillance/ self-discipline. • Foucault argued that the panopticon was one of a range of institutions that, from the 19th century, increasingly began to subject individuals to disciplinary power through self-surveillance. Other institutions include mental asylums, work houses, factories and schools.
  • 21. CCTV Most modern form of surveillance, now appearing in classrooms across the UK!
  • 22. Foucault • To Foucault disciplinary power has infiltrated all parts of society, even into the human ‘soul’. Therefore according to Foucault this change in the form of punishment from sovereign to disciplinary power in the penal system tells us how power operates in societies as a whole.
  • 23. Foucault: Evaluation • 1 The shift from physical punishment to imprisonment is less clear than he suggests. • 2 Expressive aspects of punishment ignored. • 3 He exaggerates the extent of control that the state has over individuals. Goffman (1962) showed how inmates can resist controls in prison and mental hospitals
  • 24. Changing Role of Prisons Pre-industrial society had a wide range of punishments – banishment, transportation, execution, ducking stools, flogging… Until the 18th century prison was mainly used for holding offenders prior to punishment. Only following the Enlightenment did prison come to be seen as a form of punishment in itself – a place of ‘reform’, for example through hard labour or religious instruction
  • 25. Imprisonment Today • In the UK the death penalty was ended in 1998 although the last hanging was in 1964 • Life imprisonment is considered the most severe form of punishment • Not proved an effective form of rehabilitation – recidivism (re-offending) currently stands at 60-70% of offenders • However bang ‘em policies/tougher sentences have proved an election vote winner since the 1980s – known as ‘populist punitiveness’ • As a result the prison population has continued to rise around 84,000 in 2013. Overcrowded prisons/staff shortages are now seen as a problem. A ‘riot’ in Maidstone prison in October 2013 illustrates this
  • 26. Imprisonment Today • The UK imprisons a higher proportion of its population than anywhere else in Western Europe – around 150 for every 100,000 of population. However in the US the figure is 5 times higher at around 750 for every 100,000 of population. • Most of the UK prison population is male, around 5% are female. As we know ethnic minorities are overrepresented
  • 27. Prisons in the US: An era of mass incarceration? • Rising numbers of prisoners in the US (and to a certain extent in the UK) led Garland (2001) to call the noughties and an era of mass incarceration, for example there are over 1 million black men in prison in the US. • Downes (2001) argues this has an ideological function – the US prison system soaks up 30-40% of the unemployed making capitalism seem more successful • Garland argues it is due to the rise of control/get tough policies over the old penal welfarism (prison is there to rehabilitate) • Simon (2001) argues that prisons are used to wage war on drugs – ½ million of the US prison population are imprisoned for drugs offences.
  • 28. Transcarceration • Sociologists have also identified a trend to transcarceration (individuals get locked into a cycle of control shifting between different carceral agencies – care, young offenders institution, adult prison, mental hospital….) • This might be due to the fact that the boundaries between the CJS and welfare agencies are blurring, welfare services increasingly being given crime control roles and sharing information (multi-agency idea of the Left Realists)
  • 29. Alternatives to Prison • At one time the major goal with young offenders was ‘diversion’ – divert them away from contact with the CJS to avoid the self-fulfilling prophecy which can turn them into hardened criminals. Welfare and treatment ideas meant that non-custodial community based controls were used e.g. probation. • The number of community based controls have risen in recent years – now have tagging, curfews, community service… • However the numbers actually in custody have been rising especially among the young
  • 30. Stan Cohen (2003) • Argues that the growth of community controls has simply cast the net of control over MORE people. Using Foucault’s ideas argues that the increased range of sanctions available led to the following: Penetration: law now penetrates much deeper into society Size and Density: sheer scope of activities: control now on massive scale Identity and Visibility: control and punishment used to be obvious and public but now more subtle forms e.g. CCTV, tagging, curfews often privatised now. Far from diverting the young away from the CJS these community controls may just divert them into it.