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    A criminal conviction does not entail the kind of materia... — Carmelics
    Home/Justice & Punishment
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    Challenges→We should not seek to eliminate the concept of crime from our social vocabulary on the grounds that 'crime' entails punishment as the appropriate response.

    A criminal conviction does not entail the kind of materially burdensome punishment with which penal theorists are primarily concerned.

    Justice & Punishment
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    That public, condemnatory response could consist in nothing more than a criminal...The claim that 'crime' entails punishment as the appropriate response is false, ...To define something as a 'crime' implies that some kind of public, condemnatory ...We should not seek to eliminate the concept of crime from our social vocabulary ...

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    Some penal theorists reject the characterization of punishment as inte...81%The claim that 'crime' entails punishment as the appropriate response ...80%The philosophical discussion of punishment should focus on legal punis...78%If the goal of criminal penalties is retribution rather than deterrenc...78%

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    SEP: legal-punishment
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    The question of whether, and how, legal punishment can be justified has long been a central concern of legal, moral, and political philosophy: what could justify a state in using the apparatus of the law to inflict intentionally burdensome treatment on its citizens? Radically different answers to this question are offered by consequentialist and by retributivist theorists — and by those who seek to incorporate consequentialist and retributivist considerations in ‘mixed’ theories of punishment. Meanwhile, abolitionist theorists argue that we should aim to replace legal punishment rather than to...

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