Does the Punishment fit
The word 'crime' is stated as "an act punishable by law, as being forbidden by statute or injurious to the public welfare". But does this definition relate to today's society? Does the term 'punishment' refer to the harsh, unforgiving treatment of a serious offender or just a phrase to describe an operation carried out by the government to allow the public to believe that offenders are paying for their crime and at the same time learning from their mistake? Too often we sit and view the T.V, trying to catch up with the latest gossip of the world and find ourselves bombarded with updated reports of horrific murders, devastating terrorist bomb attacks, cruel plots carried out by various members of vicious pedophile rings, perverted accounts of rape on vulnerable females who have been tampered with drugs. The list goes on, each crime unique in it's own desire. Through research I have distinguished the five main aims of punishment. The first is known as the theory of Protection, where punishment (mainly imprisonment) is used to protect society from a person's antisocial behaviour, sometimes prisons can be used to protect the prisoner from themselves by preventing them from self inflictio
I believe that the routine offered to prisoners is crazy. Next appears the theory of Retribution, which gives the perception of when a person commits a crime of a certain classification then the punishment received by that person should be fitting for the crime committed. Followed by locking up when prisoner returns to their cells until the morning. Taking these aims into account, are they covered by the methods of punishment? Do prisons really serve justice to the criminal underworld? Does the concept of serving time go through a criminal's mind before he/she commits a law breaking incident? I don't know the answers, but I can try to argue that I think prisons do not serve the purpose of punishment. "the theory of retribution" - where a life sentence means life, not the 13 or so years that are served. This seems very logical idea, one that I believe to be fair, although does today's law system follow this theory? Continuing the aims of punishment brings the idea of Deterrence, stating that if a person disobeys the law then hopefully the punishment received by that person will help the criminal learn to abide the law thus creating him/her into a citizen worthy of being allowed to mix with the society of today. Prisoners use these areas for two and half-hours.
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