Punishment Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 4 main functions of punishment?

A

Incarceration

Deterrence

Retribution

Rehabilitate

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2
Q

What does incarceration refer to?

A

Removing offenders from society

Lock up dangerous offenders to keep the public safe

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3
Q

What does deterrence refer to?

A

Punishment acts as a warning to offenders and the public

(if you commit a crime, you will be punished) - preventing more crimes from being committed

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4
Q

What does retribution refer to?

A

Offenders deserve to be punished as they have broke the law

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5
Q

What does rehabilitate refer to?

A

Change the behaviour of offenders to prevent re-offending so they don’t commit more crimes when they leave prison

e.g. provide education and training to help offenders to get legitimate jobs

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6
Q

What do functionalists argue punishment acts as?

A

Acts as a warning to offenders and the public; being sent to prison prevents re-offending and the public seeing people sent to prison prevents them from committing crime

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7
Q

What do functionalists argue deterrence is an example of?

A

Example of boundary maintenance

Every time someone breaks the law and it taken to court, the court case and media coverage confirms the shared values of society

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8
Q

What are the criticims of deterrence as a function of punishment?

A

High re-offending rates suggest that punishment doesn’t act as deterrence

Prisons are “breeding grounds” for crime - prisoners learn new criminal ideas and strategies from other inmates

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9
Q

What do functionalists argue retribution is?

A

Where offenders deserve to be punished because they have not only broken the law, but broken the shared norms and values of society

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10
Q

What does punishment of offenders give communities?

A

Gives communities a sense of justice which helps to restore social solidarity

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11
Q

What is social solidarity? (punishment)

A

Everyone feels it is right that offenders are punished and they all come together to hear the sentence

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12
Q

What are the criticisms of retribution as a function of punishment?

A

The extent to which prisons offer retribution is questionable

In recent years there have been significant funding cuts and staff shortages in UK prisons, resulting in prison officers losing authority and not challenging prisoners due to a lack of back up

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13
Q

What do right realists argue the main aim of punishment should be?

A

Main aim should be to incarcerate

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14
Q

When is the right realist view of punishment being incarceration particularly true? Why?

A

Particularly true in cases of street crime (e.g. mugging, shoplifting, knife crime)

Offenders come from the underclass - they are “scum”, living off benefits, making no valuable contribution to society

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15
Q

Why are the underclass the real criminals of society?

A

They are a threat to society’s work ethic as they make the public think it’s ok to live off benefits and do petty crimes like shoplifting

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16
Q

What are the criticisms for incarceration as a function of punishment?

A

Mass incarceration doesn’t work - year on year, the prison population grows with offenders from low income deprived backgrounds

Costs taxpayer money (£36,000 per year to keep one person in prison)

Alternative forms of punishment must be considered e.g. community service

17
Q

What do left realists argue the main function of punishment should be?

A

Should be to rehabilitate offenders - change the behaviour of offenders to prevent re-offending

18
Q

Where do a high number of offenders come from?

A

Come from working-class, deprived, low-income backgrounds

Crime may be their only option

19
Q

What do left realists argue prisons should offer?

A

Should offer education and skills training to encourage and enable prisoners to get legitimate jobs when they leave prison

Important to change thinking of offenders through counselling and group therapy sessions

20
Q

What are the criticisms of rehabilitation as a function of punishment?

A

Education provided in many prisons is inadequate

Due to significant funding cuts, there is a lack of counselling and mental health care in prisons, therefore, prisoners aren’t changing their behaviour or attitudes

21
Q

What do Marxists argue prisons serve as?

A

Argue they serve as an ideological function

Prisons are used by the ruling class to maintain their power and control over the working class

22
Q

What is an ideological function?

A

An ideology is a set of beliefs which serve the interests of a group of people in society

23
Q

How do Marxists argue the RC control the criminal justice system?

A

RC make sure the police and courts are tough on working-class offenders and that their punishment is reported in the media

24
Q

How does RC control of the criminal justice system shape societies thoughts of criminals?

A

Causes the public to think criminals are working class and are therefore scared of being victim of street crimes

25
Q

What effect does attention being drawn to WC crimes on other crimes?

A

Draws attention away from the real criminals - MC criminals who commit corporate crim

Punishment of the WC helps to hide crimes of the MC

26
Q

What are the criticisms of Marxists ideological function of punishment?

A

Labelling theory would agree - argue police target WC offenders as they fit the ‘typical delinquent’

WC more likely to be arrested and convicted of crimes