CJS, C Control, Prevention, Surveillance + Punishment Flashcards

1
Q

Who overseas the CJS?

A

Home Office + Ministry of Justice

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2
Q

What is the role of the CPS?

A

Makes decision if = enough evidence/ not to get a conviction

Decides if case gets taken to court

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3
Q

What is the role of the judicial system?

A

Also known as Her Majesty’s Court Service (HMCS)

If = no jury, decides if D = G/NG
Decides the sentencing

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4
Q

What is the role of the penal system?

A

Also known as Her Majesty’s Prison System (HMPS)

Incarceration, justice, help to reform inmates

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5
Q

What is the role of the national probation service?

A

Supervises offenders that are released into the community

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6
Q

What is the role of the police?

A

Protects the public

Makes arrests - enforces the law

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7
Q

What is NACRO?

A

Crime reduction charity that helps ex-offenders + tries to prevent young people from getting into crime

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8
Q

What is victor support?

A

Charity that gives free, confidential help to anyone affected by crime cross England + Wales (e.g. Vs/ witnesses…)
Also campaign for protection of Vs + witnesses

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9
Q

What is the Legal Services Commission?

A

Runs legal aid scheme for people who need legal representation but can’t afford it

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10
Q

What is a criticism of the CJS?

A

= disproportionate amount of influential people within the CJS = white mc men

e.g. in 2007 only 19% of judges = female + 3.5% = from an ethnically minority

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11
Q

Define social control in relation to c+d

A

Multitude of ways Ss+ Gs try to control + prevent c+d and encourage people to follow S’s shared n+v
- mechanisms of social control = ÷ into formal/ informal

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12
Q

Give 3 examples of formal social control

Explain how they reduce c+d

A
  1. Legislature: HoP make laws which constrain our behaviour + give power to CJS
  2. Religious book: e.g. bible. Teaches right/wrong, includes rules, sanctions = severe (risk of hell)
  3. Penal system: consequences act as a deterrent
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13
Q

Give 2 examples of informal social control

Explain how they reduce c+d

A
  1. Religion: teachings often include set of rules (christianity = 10 commandments) that control behaviour
  2. Family/ friends: socialise us into correct n+v, give us -ve sanctions when we break them
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14
Q

Describe functionalist views on crime control + prevention

A

Durkheim: prevented by agencies of social control + v consensus

Hirschi: prevented by social bonds

Both argue that social policies should focus on v consensus IOT keep c+d to a minimum

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15
Q

Describe left realist views on crime control + prevention

A

Both left + right = interested in practical crime prevention policies, but left:

  • stress importance of being tough on CASUES of c in S
  • believe inequality causes crime (subcultures, marginalisation)
  • believe communitarianism = best way to tackle c+d
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16
Q

Describe right realist views on crime control + prevention

A

Both left + right = interested in practical crime prevention policies, but right:

  • stress importance of being tough on CRIMINALS
  • believe individuals choose to commit crime (rational choice theory)
  • believe in SCP + ECP = best way to tackle c+d
  • believe in increased social control will reduce c+d (e.g. zero tolerance)
17
Q

What is surveillance a form of?

A

Social/ crime control

Has been quietly expanding for decades

18
Q

Give 3 examples of how we’re all under surveillance

A
  1. CCTV
  2. Internet provider - access to all of the history
  3. Education institution - watch internet usage
19
Q

How does Foucault argue that the nature of social control has changed?

A

Nature of SC - ‘discipline’
= changed from public to more subtle forms of punishment

e.g. pre-early modernity: death penalty/ torture/ imprisonment - solely carried out by CJS/ police

Late/post modernity: surveillance - carried out by range of institutions as well as CJS (education, healthcare, retail)

20
Q

What analogy does Foucault use to expel how surveillance has become more subtle?

A

Analogy of a ‘panopticon’ (meaning all-seeing place)
= prison design allowing guards to watch prisoners in cells at all times, without the guards being seen

Resulted in self-surveillance - prisoners would conform; had no way of knowing if guards = watching

21
Q

Which sociologists agree with the work of Foucault?
Why do they agree with him?

BUT how do they disagree with Foucault’s work?

A

Bauman + Lyon
= postmodernists, agree that we = living in an age of ever-present surveillance

BUT argue we’ll now living in a post-panoptical age, ‘watches’ themselves = no longer present
‘Liquid surveillance’ exists now, more flexible/mobile

22
Q

What are the 5 functions/ roles of punishments?

A
  1. Reduction - reducing crime
  2. Deterrence - punishment deters individuals from (re)offending
  3. Rehabilitation - reform/ change behaviour (e.g. anger management)
  4. Incapacitation - removes offender’s ability to offend
  5. Retribution - ‘paying back’ S
23
Q

Describe the functionalist views on punishment

A

Durkheim: in modern S function of punishment = restitutive (maintain social solidarity + reinforce shared v)
This is because in modern S, social solidarity = based on interdependence between individuals

BUT does punishment maintain social solidarity?

24
Q

Give 3 reasons why marxists are very critical of punishments used by the CJS?

A
  1. Aim = maintain social order ( = corrupt + unfair)
  2. = repressive state apparatus (used to protect rc)
  3. Imprisonment reflects C values (imposing strict discipline, puts price on worker’s time, prisoners ‘sever time to pay’ for crimes)
25
Q

How do Rusche + Kirchheimer see punishment?

A

Marxists
= part of social control
Changing forms of punishment arises form changing economic interests of dominant class
e.g. scale of brutality of punishments seems to rise when economies = strong/ labour plentiful BUT decline when = labour shortage so prisoners = fit for labour

26
Q

Describe the right realists/ new rights views on punishment

A

Punishments = too soft, resulted in rise in crime in latter 1/2 of 20th cent - no longer a deterrent
Van Der Hagg argues CJS needs to be more punitive + retributive

27
Q

What type of theorist is Van Der Hagg?

What does he argue about punishment?

A

New Right sociologist
CJS needs to be more punitive + retributive (harsher) in terms of sentences + actual experience of imprisonment
Recommends ‘3 strike’ approach
- offenders = jailed for life after 3 offence, no matter how trivial (California)
Also recommended parents who couldn’t control their children should be sent to prison

28
Q

What is a criticism of right realism/ new right views of punishment?

A

Retribution isn’t effective

Reform, rehabilitation, education, anger management, training, restorative justice = better for ensuring that prisoners don’t return to crime

29
Q

What does Cohen (labelling theorist) argue about punishment?

What is a criticism of his view?

A

Agrees with Foucault that social control has spread through S to more agencies of social control
Growth of community controls = cast a n’et of control’ over more people

BUT community controls often fast track young people into CJS e.g. ASBOs used by police haven’t diverted young people away, actually increased chances of getting custodial sentences

30
Q

What does Matthews argue about prisons?

A

Often act as ‘universities of crime’
Educating prisoners about more serious crime
- could increase chances of prisoner re-offending once released

31
Q

Garland says that we live in a time of what?

A

= living in time of ‘mass incarceration’ of particular social groups e.g. young black men
BUT prisons aren’t effective in rehabilitation (2/3 prisoners reoffend)
Argues G nowadays = more concerned with ‘managing’ crime than preventing it