Synopses & Reviews
This book departs from the customary focus of penology on punishments in criminal and youth justice and deals also with punitive elements of punishments employed, sometimes informally, in the household, nursery, school or at work. It argues that abusive punishments are particularly deeply rooted in authoritarian states in some Western countries such as Britain and the USA. Many punitive practices such as corporal and capital punishment have been exported from imperialist Britain over past centuries. Punishments have shifted ove the past 200 years from public spectacles of the stocks, the whip or the gallows to seclusion of the prison yard, or hte execution house.
The book surveys a variety of psychological, physically constraining, custodial, corporal and capital punishments. The implicit punitive content of judicial processes such as trials, as well as treatments such as behavioural therapy, may have as much psychological impact as more explicitly physical punishments.
Synopsis
This book argues that abusive punishments are particularly deeply rooted in authoritarian states and in some Western countries such as Britain and the USA, from which they have been exported over past centuries. The book surveys a variety of psychological, physically constraining, custodial, corporal and capital punishments. The implicit punitive content of judicial processes such as trial, as well as treatments such as behavioural therapy, may have as much psychological impact as more explicitly physical punishments.
Synopsis
This book departs from the customary focus of penology on punishments in criminal and youth justice and deals also with the punitive elements of punishments employed, somtimes informally, in the household, nursery, school, and at work. It argues that abusive punishments are particularly deeply rooted in authoritarian states and in some Western countries such as Britain and the USA. Many punitive practices such as corporal and capital punishment have been exported from imperialist Britain over past centuries. Punishments have shifted over the past 200 years from the public spectacle of the stocks, the whip or the gallows to the seclusion of the prison yard, or the execution house.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. 238-258) and index.
About the Author
Robert Adams is Professor of Human Services Development at the University of Lincolnshire and Humberside.