Rethinking Criminal Justice : Punishment, Abolition and Moral Psychology
by
Alan Norrie
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
Book Series
Law in Context
ISBN-10
1108478875
ISBN-13
9781108478878
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Imprint
Cambridge University Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Jul 31st, 2025
Print length
346 Pages
Ksh 18,600.00
Manufactured on Demand
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Criminal justice is in crisis. Retributive blame and punishment lead only to more violence, wasted lives and an incessant 'crime problem'. Norrie shows how a moral psychology of guilt and forgiveness addresses violation in a fundamentally different way. A mature retributive theory is abolitionist in its implications.
For 200 years, the penal equation ''crime plus blame equals punishment'' has led to painful repetition: more prisons, violence, damaged lives, a never-ending ''crime problem''. The retributive theory of punishment is central to this; yet fully developed philosophically, it becomes something fundamentally different. A moral psychology of violation distinguishes retributivism''s primitive and mature forms. It explains both punishment''s necessary failure and how guilt, forgiveness and reconciliation are possible. ''Atonement'' means both punitive ''payback'' and being morally ''at one'' with self and others. Such reconciliation for the offender, victim and wider society takes us from punishment to its abolition. Grounding responses to violation in moral psychology, mature retributivism finds its roots in natural human powers. Speaking to scholars of law, philosophy and criminology, Alan Norrie shows how a psychologically developed moral philosophy guides critical thinking towards abolishing crime and punishment.
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