the proletariat is alienated from:
4 types of alienation
the process of labour
product of labour
fellow workers
oneself
Classical school of criminology
origin is considered to be the 1764 publications of On Crimes And PunishmentsI By italien scholar cesare bonesana, marchese beccaria
wrote this book
“father od classical criminology”
influences on beccaria and his writtings
he was a child of the enlightenment - highly influenced by the concepts that these great thinkers proposed
he emphasized the concept of the social contract and the idea that citizens give up certain rights in exchange for the states/governments protection.
beccarias proposed reforms and ideas of justice
he believed in legislatures elected by the citizens rather then judges
his main goal was to prevent a single person from assigning an overly harsh sentance to a defendent and allowing another defendent in a similar case to walk free for the same criminal act
he believed that the true measures of crimes is namely the harm done to society
1st degree murder - requires proof of planning
2nd degree murder - involves no evidence of planning but rather a spontaneous act of killing
manslaughter
mens re- literally, guilt, mind
actus reus- literally, guilt, act
beccaria only belived in the actus reus because he claimed that an act against society was just as harmful regardless of intent or mens rea
beccarias ideas regarding the death penality
he was against the use of capital punishment
“the punishment of death is not a right
if the government endorsed death of a citizen it would provide a negative example to the rest of society-
beccarias concept of dterrence and the three key elements of punishment
swiftness
was to reform a system that was too slow to respond to offender
becuase of privation of liberty, being itself
The process of correctional change
occurs when one or more of the following happens
severityu of punishment of convicted offenders is modified
exlanations of criminal behaviour change
new structural arrangements such as penitentiary are created for sanctioning offenders
the number or proportions of offenders involved in the correctional process changes
why do these changes occur?
David rothman
argues that the building of the first penitentiery in america was due to a change in how crime was viewed
crime and other social problems were felt to be a natural part if society and not a threat to social order
michael foucault
examined the use of imprisonmnent by the french monarchy
he argued that the prison was designed to improve rather then reduce punishment by removing it from public view and shifting the focus of the punishment from body of the offender to his mind
micheal ignatieff
focuses on the transformations caused by the industrial revolution in europe and argues that prisons were built in an attempt to combat growing social disorder
cohen identification of four historical developments in the response to crime and deviance
increasing centralization of the response to crime and criminals and the concurrent develpment of bureaucratic insitituutions to carry out this task
the classification of criminals and deviants through the use of experts scientific knowledge
the contrustion of prisons and aslyums as places in which reform criminals and deviants
the lessesing of the severity of physical punishment and increased focus on the mind of criminal/deviant
reviewing the history of systems of punishment and correcction, several trends are evident
an increasing centralization and professionalization of punishment and correction with formal agents of control assuming responisbility for the identification, response and sanctioning of offenders
the diminishing role of the community in the punishment and corrections of offenders
concern with the effectiveness of the punishment in protecting society and in reducing the likelyhood that offenders will commit further offences
perspectives on punishment and corrections
explanations of crime and the response to criminal offenders have always been significantly influenced by social, political, religious, economic and demographic factors in society



criminal behaviour is detemrined by biological, phychological, physiological and sociological factors
the scientific method should be used to study criminal behaviour and identify criminal types
the evolution of punishment: the british legacy
blood feud - victims family or tribe avenged themsleves on the family or tribe of the offender
period prior to the middle ages
response to criminal behaviour was punishment
death penality- hanging, buried alive, stoning, boiling alive, crucifiying, drowning
corporal punishments aswell such as exile and fines
imprisonment was not used as a form of punsihment till 1500
age of enlightment
transition from corporal punishment to imprisonment
John howard and elizabeth fry
howard proposed a number of reforms relating the use of confinment including providing single sleeping rooms for convicts, segregating women and young offenders from men, buildinf facilities for bathing and employing honest and well trained prison administrators
fry was 1 volunter to work with the female convicts in early 19th centrury england
she gave attention to convicts mother
crime and punsihment in early canada
why does the working class commit crime?
economic reasons
utilitarian crimes
emotive reasons
non utilitarian crimes
capitalist values encourage crime
consumerism
greed
competition
success
individualism
conflict criminology
laws and the CJS are not neutral or objective
but rather they serve the interest of the powerful segment of society at the expense of the less powerful
the cjs operates to favour the powerful segments of society by
how laws are defines - law making
class consciousness:
an awareness of ones class status and having the ability to act in its own rational interests
capitalist ideology
a belief system perpetuated by the bourgeoisie that capitalism benefits everyone
false consciousness:
the inability to clearly see where ones own best interest lie
what is the solution to crime?
proletariats must gain class consciousness
capitalist must be eliminated - no more private property
a new social order must be established - (communism)
achieve by having a revolution
capitalism and crime
crime is inevitable in capitalist society because capitalism is crimogenic
by its very nature capitalism encourages and causes all classes to commit crime
crime committed by the wrong class is a response to the social inequalities created by the capitalist system
according to conflict criminology: crime must be understood as an outcome of broader structural issues
what level of analysis is this?
macro
the industrial revolution
emerge of capitalism
economic system that is categorize by private
two class system
the bourgeois
they have power own business
the proletarials
work production
wjay was factory life like?
overworked- child labour, no breaks, families were separated
underpaid
horrible condition
why did people continue to work under such conditions
they could easily be replaces
the beginnings of modern reform
change to the strict rule of silence
inmates got paid for their work
prisoners displaying good conduct were granted
lighting in their cells to read
permission to write a letter every 3 months
one 30 min visit per months
the panopticon
central tower with windows that are tinted
you can see everyone
inmates become self regulated
first prison in Canada
Kingston penitentiary
1835
The Genesis of Prisons
A demand for an alternative to capital punishment, transportation and hulks
A demand for more humane and rational approaches to punishment
Ideas of the Enlightenment and the influence of classical Criminologists
They need for a punishment that treats offenders equally
The deprivation of liberty
A shift in the focus of punishment from the body of the offender to their mind
The influence of reformers:
John Howard -The state of Prisons in England and wales (1977)
Elizabeth Fry
The Penitentiary Belief: The criminal is a rational being who can reformed
Goal: To transform the criminal from a convict into an industrious and useful citizen
How ? Remove corrupting influences Through penitence ( "penitentiary") Hard. labour Teaching discipline / Enforcing routine
What object was the symbol of discipline and controlled the convids day? Punishment L> the boll
Precursors to Prisons
Ls Dungeons
Execution
L Clerical penance
It involved the church
they would be send to monasteries
L Debtor's prison
For people in debt
All family was send there
They would pay off their debls
L> Bridewells / Workhouse
Individuals that are unemployed and unwilling to
work
Gave them shelter, work, low income
It was used as a treat
L> Asylums
Peade that were insane " lunatic"
L> Local Jails
They were not a form of punishment
People awaitina trial
People awaiting punishment