Criminal Law Courts and Procedure

Punishment Theory Meets Punishment Practice

Edited by Leo Zaibert · Alison Liebling · Ben Crewe
Coming Soon Hart Publishing Available January 2027

Specifications

ISBN-13
9781509990634
Publisher
Hart Publishing
Publication
January 2027
Format
Hardback
Jurisdiction
U.K. ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

This book considers the questions 'do we punish too much?' and 'do we punish in the right ways?'

It shines a much-needed light on the relation between how punishment is experienced by those subjected to it (and others), and the more general consideration of what justifies punishment in the first place.

Leading experts in the field weigh up what is appropriate punishment, explain why punishment is so stubbornly problematic, look at the compatibility of modes and processes of penal sanctions and explore how best to achieve the aspiration to set reasonable terms for future coexistence through state punishment.

The book addresses key topics such as the issues surrounding life imprisonment, how criminal offenders can be successfully integrated into society and considers what is at stake when we use prisons to punish. It considers how we know whether we over-punish offenders and what we should do in response to over-punishment.

The book makes a groundbreaking contribution to the philosophy of punishment, connecting general questions about the justification of punishment with issues in punishment practice.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Leo Zaibert, Alison Liebling, and Ben Crewe (University of Cambridge, UK)
1. The Hard Problem of Punishment
Leo Zaibert (University of Cambridge, UK)
2. Why is Punishment so Stubbornly Problematic?
Jonathan Jacobs (John Jay College of Criminal Justice, USA)
3. Saving Retributivism from Revenge: Why Retributivism Needs Empirical Monitoring
Netanel Dagan and Adiel Zimran (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel)
4. Rethinking Criminal Justice Practice: Punishment's Deep and Tendential Abolition
Alan Norrie (University of Warwick, UK)
5. Unifying Penal Theory and Penal Practice: How to Improve the Ethics of Punishment
Jesper Ryberg (Roskilde University, Denmark)
6. Offenders Betrayed
Gabrielle Watson (University of Edinburgh, UK)
7. Prison Conditions as Civic Betrayal: The Significance of Brutality and Race
Ekow Yankah (University of Michigan, USA)
8. Integrating Criminal Offenders into Society: A Normative Framework for Habilitative Imprisonment
Hadassa Noorda (University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands)
9. Punishment by Society?
Alice Ievins, Ellen Reeves, and Shadd Maruna (University of Liverpool, UK)
10. Prisons, Punishment and Destructive Suffering
Alison Liebling (University of Cambridge, UK)
11. Suffering, Retribution, and Moral Accountability in the Contemporary Life Sentence
Ben Jarman (University of Southampton, UK) and Ben Crewe (University of Cambridge, UK)
12. How to Determine Whether the State Over (or Under)-Punishes Crime
Julian Roberts (University of Oxford)
13. A Defence of Penal Subjectivism in Theory and Practice
David Hayes (The University of Sheffield, UK)
14. Nicola Padfield “Weighing up Appropriate Punishment: Can Sensibility Help?
David Hayes (The University of Sheffield, UK)
15. Theorising State Punishment: Theory and Practice?
Matt Matravers (University of York, UK)
16. Not Just 'How Much', but 'How', Should we Punish? Searching for the Mean
Antony Duff and Sandra Marshall (University of Stirling, UK)
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