Chapter-Iv Theories of Punishment
Chapter-Iv Theories of Punishment
Chapter-Iv Theories of Punishment
THEORIES OF
PUNISHMENT
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CHAPTER-IV
THEORIES OF PUNISHMENT
unpleasant.
the offender.
offender that crime does not pay, second, after punishment the offender must
have a fair chance of a fresh start. And third, “the state which claims the
right of punishment must uphold superior values which the (offender) can
inflicted upon the offender in a definite way by or in the name of the society
the offender for his violation of law. This is an instrument of public justice.
heard, punishment awarded by the Court and finally executed by the State,
law, if father beats his son for committing a theft in his house or killing of
Nexalites by the State for their anti national activities without prosecuting
them.
(a) It is inflicted by the group in its corporate capacity upon one who is
pardon is treated as substitute for the punishment. Even in the prison, the
basic idea is not to inflict pain or suffering but to teach the convict the
would be true that punishment administers some sort of pain to the offender.
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be mistaken that he has broken the law and hence was a criminal under the
law. This is a case of strict liability and if one breaks a law unintentionally,
man is that he deserves it for what he has done. Further, though a person has
not committed the offence, but if there is an indication that the man is one
for an offence.
Given this, and the difficulties raised by strict and vicarious liability
who has broken a rule, out of intention, or negligence, or a man who has
broken certain rules out of neither, or a man who occupies a certain position
some of the normal rights of a citizen on the ground that he has violated a
rule of law, the violation having been established by trial according to the
due process of law, provided that the deprivation is carried out by the
recognized legal authorities of the State, that the rule of law clearly specifies
both the offence and the attached penalty, that the Courts construe statutes
strictly, and that the statute was on the books prior to the time of the
offence”.
offender who has committed harm and this presupposes a set of values by
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reference to which both the harm and the punishment are ethically
Hall gives clear norms for the meaning of punishment. But, the
outside such definition. The human efforts of many to better the lot of
All punishments take place within a society’s ordinary legal and penal
systems. In the past single reasons have often been given for the
deter others from offending i.e., deterrence. A third reason is partly that
committed in the future, but not through deterrence. This could be described
as an end itself and also a means to the prevention of crime. These three
reasons, each with variants and complexities, have been known as theories
punishment. “You hurt me and I will hurt you” is its literal meaning. One
promoting another good, either with regard to the criminal himself to civil
society, but must in all cases be imposed only because the individual on
whom it is inflicted has committed a crime. For one man ought never to be
mixed up with subjects of Real right (i.e. goods or property). Against such
treatment his inborn personality has a right to protect him even although he
guilty and punishable, before there can be any thought of drawing from his
initially based on revenge. Revenge by whom? The victim cannot take the
law into his own hands in the modem democratic set up. We are to observe
that the Lex Talionis: ‘an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth’ cannot be a
partly by the legislators by fixing scale of penalties and partly by Judges and
being of the offender and his family or of society as a whole, within the
has acted wrongfully. What retributionists have insisted upon is that no man
can be punished unless he is guilty, that is, unless he has broken the law.
the penalty will give satisfactions equivalent to the grievance caused by his
action, (3) that similar ones have been and will be imposed on similar
offenders, (4) that he was responsible for his action and performed it with a
criminals. Modem penal system has changed in such a way that it cannot
also not consistent with the modem penal philosophy. To illustrate, “if some
very poor and some of whom are not so poor, we are likely to distribute a
large amount of benefits to each of those who are very poor and smaller
amount to others who are not that much poor. Similarly, the fact that some
persons have committed similar offences is not itself a reason for similar
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action because some of them may be young and first offenders, who need a
lenient view of punishment than those who are recidivists though committed
victims of offences and others cannot be fully pressed as many crimes are
not reported to the State, if so reported are not registered by the State or if
unpunished. Further, some crimes are covered under the insurance scheme
such as insurance of movable and immovable property against theft and fire
and as such the shock of crime is absorbed through these modem methods.
the law and order in the society, the retribution has its impact as a
“Punishment is before all things deterrent, and the chief end of the law
of crime is to make the evil doer as example and a warning to all who are
factors.
offence, which has more than a certain evidential importance, and it depends
given to victims of offences and others (as in retribution theory). It need not
the law. The general assumption is that this will curb the criminal activities
have two aims in view. These are individual deterrence and general
deterrence. The former looking to the individual offender before the court,
section of it.
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isolated fact, the like of which would never recur, punishment would be
useless. It would be only adding one evil to another. But when we consider
that an unpunished crime leaves the path of crime open, not only to the same
delinquent but also to all those who may have the same motives and
common safety.
In this Chapter we shall be concerned with only the first and second
world war. In 1944, the German occupying forces deported the Danish
police, and for some time the country had only a local guard force invested
crimes. While this experience does show that crime is reduced very
suggests that deterrent methods are of less value reducing the incidence of
involved.
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One may say, that this is a situation of war time which is one of
following conditions are satisfied. It does indeed deter and in so doing (1)
causes less distress than would occur if effectively at a cost of less distress.
sometimes been true that offenders regarded the penalties for their offences
attempts to justify this and nothing else. The deterrence theory is based on
It provides that it is better that 10 guilty persons escape rather than one
prove the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable doubt and that the accused
This principle has double effects. People respect the law because they
belief in the existence of victimization. Who can say what the consequences
On the other hand, the maxim, let ten guilty persons escape but let not
thought that the maxim was by no means true in all circumstances. A rule
must be seen. What this means in terms of burden of proof is that case need
not be proved beyond all doubts. For all these reasons it is true to say with
Viscount Simon, that, a miscarriage ofjustice may arise from the acquittal of
guilty no less than from the conviction of the innocent.” In short our
the pragmatic need to make criminal justice potent and realistic. A balance
the confidence of the people in the judicial system, much worse, however, in
conviction of an innocent person are far more serious and its reverberations
cannot but be felt in a civilized society. Some risk of the conviction of the
criminal justice. Such a risk can be minimized but not ruled out altogether.
is better that a thousand or even a million guilty persons should escape than
that one innocent person should suffer but no responsible and practical
person would accept such a view. For it is obvious that if our ratio is
extended indefinitely, there comes a point when the whole system of justice
Other consequences
involve infractions of the other rules of punishment. These are those which
provide heavier penalties for offences involving greater harms, for example
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grievous assault against petty theft. Here the deterrence theorists explain,
example.
the consideration. For example that they increase the power of individuals
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to identify beforehand periods when the law’s punishments will not interfere
with them.
doubted by those who assert that many people do become criminals and will
whereas the purpose of law is positive. It has also to be borne in the mind
The hope of escaping justice in the concrete case will easily have a
strong feeling tone than the opposing fear of the abstract general law. The
strength of the forbidden desire will narrow the circle of association and
eliminate the idea of the probable consequences. The stupid mind will not
think the correct expectations, the slow mind will bring the check too late,
when the deed is done, the vehement mind will overrule the energies of
inhibition, and the emotional mind will be more moved by the anticipated
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immediate pleasure than by the thought of a later suffering. And all this will
cruel punishment has brutalized the mind the threat will be as ineffective as
if the mildness of punishment had reduced its pain. Worst of all, this fear
will be ruled out if the mind develops in an atmosphere of crime where the
child hears of the criminal as a hero, and looks at Jail as an ordinary affair,
troublesome only as most factors in his slum life are troublesome; or if the
must be certain. The criminal justice system, which follows the principle
that the prosecution should establish the guilt beyond reasonable doubt and
benefit of the doubt goes to the accused, has never been able to use the
punishment should be swift and sure, “like a seal to hot wax” to use
regime stated that pick-pockets were to be seen busily plying their trade
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pockets were well aware that everybody’s eyes are fixed on the gallows and
the chances of detection are few and fewer still were the chances of
conviction.
own limitations as regards its deterrent aspects. For instance, the deterrent
effect will not be similar on all offenders. Punishment is more likely to deter
background and social and economic status etc. On the contrary it will have
1968 suggests that most people over-rate their chances of detection and rank
criminal case as the appeals can be filed in the higher courts against the
conviction/acquittal. By that time the general public may not remember the
deterrence depends upon the publicity given to the general public about the
Severity of punishment
Putthammer has argued that punishment has never been given a really fair
chance to demonstrate just how much it can accomplish, for the reason that
we have tended to assume that severe punishment will deter, even if it is not
imposed certainly. When one offender is punished severely and ninety are
not even detected in their crimes, then the effects of an official policy of
pardon by the President and Governors are permitted by law to relax the
punishment has been mitigated in other ways also. Corporal punishment has
last part of the 18th Century Bentham made the following statement
can agree, is performed either with a cold or a red hot iron, it is only a slice
of ham which is burnt; to complete the force, the criminal screams, whilst it
is only the fat which smokes and bums and the king wing spectators only
in view of the increasing application of the probation system. The new code
of Criminal Procedure has incorporated S. 361 for the first time requiring the
Court to give special reasons in the judgment for not applying the probation
Probation of Offenders Act and the Children Act. The liberal use of Section
361 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 by the Courts in favour of the
enforcement agencies and the public at large that offenders are almost
invariably let off and the investigation, prosecution and trial of offences are
nothing but empty rituals. This has a serious effect on deterrence theory of
A Case study
denied. But, it will be a difficult task to find out clearly as to who has been
reference to income tax laws is an interesting one. They divided about 400
tax payers into four matched groups. Members of the ‘Sanction’ group were
penalties which they might suffer if they tried to evade taxes. Members of
arouse their civic sense and feeling of duty. The third of ‘placebo’ group
were asked only neutral questions, which avoided both sort of stimulus. The
fourth groups were not interviewed at all. The interviews took place in the
month before the tax payers were due to file their returns for 1962. The
Internal Revenue Service compared the returns of the four groups for the
year before the experiment and the year 1962. The reported gross incomes
The study, therefore, showed that the element of deterrence did have some
crimes, but not to different types of crimes such as murder where even the
desired deterrent effect. By the year 1800 over 200 offences were
be hanged not because you have stolen a sheep, but in order that others may
not steal sheep’. Even then the crimes were committed because of the fact
that the police was not well organized and there was much uncertainty of
Even in the era when extremely severe punishment was imposed for
refuted”.
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from the penal system. Our Judges and legislators believe that punishment
a person from repeating crime and to prevent other persons from committing
mention our judicial decisions. Legislators and others are also of the view
that severe penalties are more deterrent in cases of social and economic
food and drug smuggling, black marketing, tax evasion etc. Recently the
Parliament has made the offences relating to adulteration of food and drugs
Bill, 1972 has sought to bring all offences given in the Penal Code which are
subsequent conviction.
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person for an offence for which death is one of the punishments provided by
law or where the sentence of death imposed on a person has been commuted
under Section 433 into one of imprisonment for life, such person shall not be
imprisonment.”
commutation of sentences. In Meru Ram case, it was argued that fixing the
infliction.
penologists, such fear may not flabbergast and sociologist if by sheer good
better and wiser man and a good citizen. Progressive criminologists across
the World will agree that the Gandhian diagnosis of offenders as patients
and his concept of prisons as hospitals - mental and moral - is the key to the
clear that crime is a pathological aberration, that the criminal can ordinarily
reformative consequences
for satisfactory explanation. All the offenders cannot be ill. This also
general way saying that all offenders are mentally ill. Should we have much
mental illness can be broken down into a number of categories such (1)
criminals who do not have much likelihood of their treatment. On the other
hand there may be some offenders, though might have committed serious
offences like murder need no treatment since they are not a criminal from
Under these typical situations offenders should not be sent to jail from
the reformative angle. Here not the reformative theory, but the deterrent
There are only few aspects of the treatment problem which are to be
offenders. And as such there will still be a little element of the retribution
punishment of some sort after crime. But, others say that in view of the
considers imprisonment the means to attain the twin aims, i.e., reform and
treatment of the criminals so that they will commit no crime after their
release. Society also seeks protection from criminals. And for this purpose
prison isolates criminals from the community for a certain time. All these
in the United States has stated the problem of Cross Conflict as follows:
one hand, prisons are expected to punish, on the other, they are supposed to
reform. They are expected to discipline rigorously at the same time they
teach self reliance. They are built to be operated like vast impersonal
machines, yet they are expected to fit man to live normal community lives.
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They operate in accordance with a fixed automatic routine, yet they are
into free prisoners idleness despite the fact that one of their primary
country clubs, catering to the whims and fancies of the inmates. To others
the prison atmosphere seems charged only with bitterness, rancor and an all
the stand taken by Dr.Hira Singh, Director of the Institute of Social Defence,
prison would continue to play a vital part in dealing with hardened, the
habitual and the incorrigible. At the same time the rationale of imprisoning
those who are themselves the prey of criminogenic situations rather than
the ideal of complete reform has not been reached, although there is wide