Law in Contemporary Society

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JohnSchwabFirstPaper 10 - 01 Jun 2010 - Main.JohnSchwab
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DETERRENCE ANALYSIS: COSTS AND BENEFITS

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At its heart, deterrence is a balancing test. Theoretically, a society can balance the costs of a particular punishment with the benefits gained from imposing that punishment. In the United States, the most common punishment for felonies is imprisonment. However, while many of the costs of imprisonment (in terms of financial expenditures and community and individual impact) are quantifiable, it is far more difficult to evaluate the the benefits of punishment.
 
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Crime Prevention

 
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If the system were better, would Robinson be worse? This seems to me to indicate another mistake: that Robinson's work is to be judged by whether guilty people go to jail or to the street, or by some function that subtracts from the badness of the crime the destructiveness of the criminal justice system and determines incarceration on the difference. His work is to be judged by the determination and the resourcefulness with which he protects the interest of his clients, regardless of who they are, which is, as he says, none of our fucking business. (This is strictly true in preindictment representation, as I have pointed out, where the presumption of innocence means the difference between an innocent man's undiminished credibility and reputation and the creation of an unfettered power of personal destruction, entirely unrelated to provable guilt, in the prosecutor's office.)

Deterrence

A major reason for this is our belief that criminal law operates not just to punish the guilty but to deter future crime and that it works, therefore, for the overall good of society. Unfortunately, deterrence talk is another form of Felix Cohen's transcendental nonsense. It allows us to think positively about criminal law, even while knowing it does horrible things to other human beings.

That depends in part on how deterrence is achieved. Incarceration, which has serious destructive consequences for many parties who have committed no crime, is a form of general deterrence entitled to particularly little respect.
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The most prominently claimed benefit is that imposition of the criminal law deters both the individual felon and potential future actors from engaging in similar behavior.
 

Individual Deterrence

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 Moreover, when we make deterrence based decisions, those decisions are not based in fact. Not only do we lack data showing that deterrence in general works, we have no idea what degree of punishment will actually deter future actors. We are making value judgments: what activities should be deterred? What penalties are necessary to create deterrence? How harshly are we willing to punish individual human beings to achieve that deterrence? But if we accept that, as an empirical matter, deterrence is not proven to work, all these judgments boil down to is how much punishment does a particular crime deserve.
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Punishment & Peace of Mind

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Peace of Mind

 Punishment is the primary goal of our criminal justice system. Someone has done something bad and he ought to pay for it. Theoretically, our legislatures determine how much he has to pay based on how bad an action he undertook. However, there is one factor that rarely gets mentioned in discussions of appropriate punishment: peace of mind. Perhaps this is because we are not comfortable baldly stating that we are okay with ruining the lives of criminals (and sometimes their families) and tearing apart communities so that we can sleep better. But this is precisely what we do.

Revision 10r10 - 01 Jun 2010 - 17:55:48 - JohnSchwab
Revision 9r9 - 28 May 2010 - 03:23:45 - JohnSchwab
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