Criminal Punishment.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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In the United States and Canada, younger offenders may be sentenced to highly regimented, military-style correctional programs known as boot camps.
Generally,offenders volunteer to participate in boot camp programs to avoid other types of incarceration.
At boot camps, officials subject offenders to strict discipline and physicaltraining.
They also provide educational or vocational programs.
Boot camps serve as an alternative to traditional, long-term incarceration and attempt to train offendersto be law-abiding.
Typically, boot camp sentences range from two to six months.
C Corporal Punishment
Throughout history, societies have used corporal punishments to inflict physical pain on wrongdoers.
Tribal societies find these punishments particularly appealing, sincethey are immediate and direct, and often debilitating.
Such societies often lack the facilities to confine offenders, and corporal punishment offers a more directapplication of penalties for violating community rules.
Many people believe that corporal punishments, which graphically demonstrate the consequences of crime, helpdeter future wrongdoing.
Harsh physical punishment also satisfies the goal of retribution (revenge).
In Europe during the Middle Ages, entire families would take revenge against members of rival families for crimes or wrongs committed by one or more members of therival family.
Some of these blood feuds lasted for many years—even several generations.
In some tribal societies, entire tribes would feud with other tribes, andmembers of rival tribes would hunt and kill one another.
Because ongoing feuds among kin groups were disruptive, various European countries drafted agreementssetting societal policies concerning punishment.
For example, in 1215 King John of England signed the Magna Carta, which provided that accused criminals could not beexecuted or incarcerated prior to a trial by a jury of their fellow citizens.
Governmental and religious authorities also used many forms of corporal punishment, often to torture persons into confessing to a crime or heresy (unorthodox religiousbelief).
During the 13th century the Roman Catholic Church established the Inquisition, a judicial institution charged with finding, trying, and punishing heretics.
Formsof torture used by inquisitors included flogging, boiling, and stretching on a device known as the rack.
A person who underwent the rack torture was forced to lie on along board.
After the person’s hands and feet were tied to mechanisms at opposite ends of the board, pressure on the mechanisms was increased in oppositedirections.
Frequently the person’s arms and legs would pop from their sockets.
This painful torture was sometimes fatal and commonly resulted in permanent physicalinjuries.
The colonists who settled North America used several types of corporal punishment, including the use of the ducking stool.
In this punishment, a criminal was tied to achair at the end of a long pole and lowered into a lake or river and nearly drowned.
Branding—the searing of flesh with a hot iron—was another form of punishmentused by the colonists.
Persons convicted of adultery (having sexual relations with someone other than one’s spouse) were sometimes branded with the letter A on their faces or foreheads.
During the late 1700s many of these corporal punishments were discontinued in favor of more humane methods, such as incarceration.
D Banishment
Some societies punish certain undesirable individuals, such as criminals and political and religious dissidents, with banishment or exile.
In ancient times banishment wasa common form of punishment, and it often amounted to capital punishment because authorities would deny food and shelter within a certain distance to thosebanished.
The Old Testament of the Bible contains the story of Adam and Eve, who were banished from the Garden of Eden for their disobedience to God.
During the 18th and 19th centuries officials in various Chinese provinces used banishment as a punishment.
It ranked second only to death as the most seriouspunishment imposed.
China and other countries also used banishment as a means to colonize regions.
For example, from 1788 to 1868 England banished more than160,000 prisoners to Australia or Africa to work in labor colonies they established.
Banishment has also been used in modern times.
In 1993, for example, tribal officials banished two teenaged members of the Tlingit tribe of Native Americans aspunishment for a robbery.
The offenders were sent from their home in Everett, Washington, to a desolate island off Alaska to live in isolation for several months.
E Capital Punishment
The most extreme form of punishment is death.
Execution of an offender is known as capital punishment.
Like corporal punishment and banishment, capital punishmenthas been used since ancient times.
The Old Testament of the Bible prescribes death as the punishment for over 30 crimes.
The Romans executed Jesus Christ bycrucifixion, a common form of capital punishment between the 6th century BC and the 4th century AD.
In England in the 1800s more than 200 crimes were punishable by death.
In the late 18th century, social commentators began to criticize penal practices they considered brutal and unnecessary.
Many of these philosophers condemned the useof capital punishment, initiating a debate that has continued to modern times.
During the 19th century, legal reformers in England and the United States helped enactlaws limiting the death penalty to the most serious crimes.
Shortly after World War II (1939-1945), many countries in Western Europe, beginning with Italy andGermany, abolished capital punishment.
Britain, Canada, and Australia followed suit.
A similar abolition movement coincided with the breakup of the Union of SovietSocialist Republics in 1991, when several nations in Eastern Europe eliminated capital punishment.
The use of the death penalty has become increasingly controversial,especially in the United States and Japan, the only industrialized democracies that continue to practice capital punishment.
In the U.S.
system of government, power is divided between a central (federal) authority and smaller local units of government (the states).
Federal law authorizescapital punishment for more than 40 offenses, including premeditated murder, treason, and murder related to aircraft hijacking, drug trafficking, and civil rightsviolations.
The majority of states also authorize the death penalty for violations of state criminal law, including such crimes as treason, murder, and rape.
As of early2005, 12 states did not permit capital punishment.
Methods for executing offenders vary among the states.
The majority of states that have the death penalty executeoffenders by means of lethal injection —the administration of fatal amounts of fast-acting drugs and chemicals.
Other common methods include lethal gas and electrocution.
Three states execute criminals by hanging and three states provide for execution by firing squad.
In the 1972 case of Furman v.
Georgia, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that the procedures leading to imposition of the death penalty in Georgia were unlawful.
Although the Court indicated that capital punishment was not necessarily a “cruel and unusual punishment” in violation of the Constitution of the United States,it determined that allowing a jury unlimited discretion to choose between a death sentence and a prison sentence is unconstitutional.
Because all of the states thatprovided for capital punishment at that time also used a standardless system—that is, a system in which the sentencing decision of jurors was unguided—this rulinginvalidated every state’s death penalty statute.
Following the Furman decision, many states passed new death penalty legislation.
These laws still gave the jury the discretion to choose between imprisonment or death, but they also restricted the types of crimes for which death could be imposed and provided instructions to guidethe jury’s determination of punishment.
In 1976 the Supreme Court ruled such systems constitutional.
Opponents of capital punishment see it as barbaric and degrading to the dignity of the individual.
Many believe it poses too great a risk of executing an innocent person.Supporters respond that the death penalty provides a uniquely effective punishment.
They consider it a necessary form of retribution for terrible crimes.
Opponents ofthe imposition of capital punishment in the United States assert that authorities apply the death penalty unfairly.
These critics emphasize the disproportionate numbersof African Americans on death row and also note that the race of the crime victim provides a statistically clear determinant of whether an offender receives a sentence.
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Liens utiles
- (1802); The Rational of Reward (1825) ; The Rational of Punishment (1830).
- Nathaniel Hawthorne I INTRODUCTION Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864), American novelist, whose works are deeply concerned with the ethical problems of sin, punishment, and atonement.
- Capital Punishment.
- Criminal Law.
- Criminal Procedure.