View the Table of Contents.
Read the Chapter One.
"A book that can spur good discussion and stimulate critical
thinking."
--"Law and Politics Book Review"
"A finely reasoned argument on the ills of punishment. . . . An
informative and thought provoking read."
--"New York Law Journal"
"Philosophers of law too often assume that criminal punishment
is of course justified and then argue over exactly what is the best
justification for the practice--utilitarian deterrence,
retribution, moral education, etc. It is important that this shared
assumption be challenged and that serious consideration be given to
the possibility that criminal punishment may not be justified at
all. Although Professor Golash has by no means persuaded me that
all criminal punishment should be totally abolished, her book is to
be welcomed as an attempt to provoke serious reflection on this
basic issue."
--Jeffrie G. Murphy, Regents' Professor of Law, Philosophy, and
Religious Studies, Arizona State University
"A work of sweeping vision and profound insight. Punishment,
Golash demonstrates convincingly, is wrong in itself and
counterproductive as well. That her fine book closes with a
thoughtful sketch of a world without punishment is a testament to
the author's intellectual range and originality."
--Robert Johnson, author of "Hard Time: Understanding and Reforming
the Prison"
What ends do we expect and hope to serve in punishing criminal
wrongdoers? Does the punishment of offenders do more harm than good
for American society? In The Case against Punishment, Deirdre
Golash addresses these and other questions about the value of
punishment in contemporary society.
Drawing on bothempirical evidence and philosophical literature,
this book argues that the harm done by punishing criminal offenders
is ultimately morally unjustified. Asserting that punishment
inflicts both intended and unintended harms on offenders, Golash
suggests that crime can be reduced by addressing social problems
correlated with high crime rates, such as income inequality and
local social disorganization. Punishment may reduce crime, but in
so doing, causes a comparable amount of harm to offenders. Instead,
Golash suggests, we should address criminal acts through trial,
conviction, and compensation to the victim, while also providing
the criminal with the opportunity to reconcile with society through
morally good action rather than punishment.
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