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The Denials of Justice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 October 2011

Extract

The contemporary American will to punish is simultaneously in disarray and experiencing dramatic expansion. Crime, despite the ambiguities of its statistical measurement, remains a central focus of contemporary politics. Notwithstanding a “crisis of penological modernism” that has undercut traditional explanations and justifications for the penal apparatus, prison construction continues at an accelerated pace while proposals for increasing the severity of juvenile punishments seem omnipresent. Criminological discussions continue to stress the technicalities of the problem of punishment while larger social issues remain marginalized. In this situation, the evident problems of the criminal justice system are transmuted into programs for increasing its reach and power.

Type
Forum: Commentary
Copyright
Copyright © the American Society for Legal History, Inc. 1998

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References

1. Garland, David, Punishment and Modern Society: A Study in Social Theory (Chicago, 1990), 7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

2. Dubber, Markus Dirk, “The Right to Be Punished: Autonomy and Its Demise in Modern Penal Thought,” Law and History Review 16 (1998): 113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

3. Ibid., 116.

4. Meranze, Michael, Laboratories of Virtue: Punishment, Revolution, and Authority in Philadelphia, 1760–1835 (Chapel Hill, 1996), 120-57, 173204.Google Scholar

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8. For a discussion of elite indifference, see Gatrell, The Hanging Tree, 243-46. In addition, Gatrell includes extensive discussion of the complexities of popular responses in the eighteenth century; see especially ibid., 56-89.

9. Dubber, “The Right to Be Punished,” 136.

10. Meranze, Laboratories of Virtue, 87-328.

11. Dubber, “The Right to Be Punished,” 146.