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Morals, ethics and justice

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Title: Morals, ethics and justice


1
Morals, ethics and justice
2
Why should CJ professionalsworry about ethics?
  • They are public servants, withpublic duties and
    responsibilities(more on this later)
  • They use discretion can choosefrom different
    courses of action
  • They have authority and power
  • Use force and coercion
  • Their actions can have majorimpacts on peoples
    lives
  • Talking point ? the 23-year old cop(meaning
    chronological age, not years on the job)

3
Definitions
  • Morals
  • Principles of right and wrong
  • What a society considers good conduct
  • Taking care of elderly, being kind to strangers,
    avoiding violence
  • Ethics
  • Discipline of determining good and evil
  • Study of how society defines good and bad conduct
  • Behaving morally
  • Duties specific behaviors required by ones role
    (e.g. parent provider)
  • Imperfect duties general obligation no specific
    conduct set out(i.e., generosity)
  • Superogatories commendable acts that go beyond
    whats required
  • Values
  • Desirable or important qualities - loyalty,
    honesty, wealth, etc.
  • Not all values are of equal worthiness

4
Types of ethics
  • Meta-ethics - the scientific study of ethics
  • What is the meaning of the terms used in ethics?
  • Are ethical systems relative or universal?
  • Are they real? How can they be verified?
  • Normative ethics
  • What people ought to do
  • Definition of proper conduct and moral
    obligations
  • Applied ethics
  • Applying ethical principles to specific issues
  • Professional ethics
  • Applying ethical principles to occupations

5
Principles of public serviceethics (Josephson
Institute)
  • Office is a public trust
  • Accountability truth and transparency
  • Democracy responsiveness to political oversight
  • Objectivity, freedom from conflicts of interest
  • Exchange agreement (social contract)
  • Obligations of CJ professionals
  • Due Process - Objectivity, accuracy, impartiality
  • Equal Protection - Freedom from bias, equal
    treatment

6
Making moral judgments
  • To judge there must have been
  • A human act, of free will, that affects others
  • Legal v. moral culpability
  • Different concepts
  • Exemptions from legal and/or moral culpability
  • Juveniles - too immature to appreciate
    consequence of their acts
  • The insane - mentally incapable of appreciating
    consequences
  • Lack of free will - someone was coerced or acted
    in self-defense
  • Mitigations - culpable but with an explanation
  • Intent - negligent (bad), reckless (worse),
    purposive (worst)
  • Life circumstances such as poverty lack of
    opportunity
  • Relative culpability (hanger-on v. ringleader)
  • Provocation (e.g., battered spouse lashes out)

7
Ethical issues v. ethical dilemmas
  • Ethical issue
  • Broad social questions or policy decisions, not
    resolvable by individuals (death penalty,
    three-strikes, citizen oversight, broken windows,
    immigration law, etc.)
  • Ethical dilemmas
  • Individual faced with a decision what to do
  • Situation is complicated because
  • Ethically correct thing to do is unclear
  • Taking the ethically correct action may have
    costs - negative consequences for the actor or
    for others

8
Analyzing ethical dilemmas
  • Critical thinking is key
  • Separate facts from concepts
  • Identify underlying assumptions
  • Process
  • Identify the facts. What happened? What is known?
  • Identify relevant values (e.g., loyalty, duty,
    honesty, fairness) and concepts (e.g., due
    process, proportionality, equality)
  • Identify all moral dilemmas for each person
    involved. Be sure to identify relevant laws,
    agency regulations, professional codes and
    workplace standards.
  • Decide on the most immediate moral or ethical
    issue
  • Use an ethical system or other means to resolve
    the ethical or moral dilemma

9
Ethical systems
  • What are they?
  • Set of principles that define what is moral
  • Underlying premises for making judgments
  • Beyond argument
  • Characteristics
  • Prescriptive - demand certain behavior
  • Authoritative - not debatable
  • Logically impartial or universal - rules apply to
    all
  • Not self-serving - what is good for all, not just
    the actor
  • Ethical system ? Moral rules (limit drinking, put
    children first) ? Moral judgment (parents who
    drink and neglect kids are bad)

10
Ethical system Ethics of virtue(Aristotle)
  • What makes a good person?
  • People not born good but become goodby following
    habits of a moral exemplar
  • Focus on character - not actions
  • Intellectual virtues (e.g. wisdom, understanding)
  • Moral virtues (e.g. self-control, generosity)
  • Josephson Institutes six pillars of character
    Trustworthiness, respect, responsibility,
    fairness, caring, citizenship
  • Golden mean moral choices reflect moderation
    or the midpoint
  • Example - thrift lies between being a miser and a
    spendthrift
  • Might explain a lot of behavior
  • We usually do the right thing without thinking
    about it
  • Difficult to apply to individual moral dilemmas
    because virtues might sometimes be in opposition
    (e.g., honesty and loyalty)

11
Ethical systemNatural Law
  • Morality is part of the natural order
  • There are universal rights and wrongs
  • What is good is what conforms to thenatural
    order of things
  • Preserving life
  • Maintaining the species
  • Prohibiting needless killing
  • Promoting socialization through altruism and
    generosity
  • Pursuit of knowledge and understanding about the
    universe
  • Natural human rights
  • Balance between personal rights and societal
    obligations
  • Social contract give up something to the group
    to gain a greater benefit
  • Difficulty what is natural?

12
Ethical systemReligion
  • Moral guidelines for how to live ones life
  • Gods will is beyond question
  • Many religions have similar moral principles
  • A version of Christianitys Do unto
    othersGolden Rule can be found in Hinduism,
    Buddhism, Confucianism and Judaism
  • Issues
  • Is Gods command to not do something based on an
    acts inherent wrongfulness, or on Gods own
    judgment?
  • Determining Gods will (Barry)
  • Individual conscience
  • Religious authorities
  • Holy scriptures

13
Ethical system Ethical Formalism (Immanuel Kant)
  • A deontological ethical system
  • Concerned only with the nature of an act
  • Only truly good thing is a good will
  • Acts should always conform to the categorical
    imperative
  • Could an act become a rule of nature? If so, it
    is good
  • Acts are evaluated without concern for their
    purpose or consequences
  • Killing and lying are always wrong
  • As long as an act is done in good will, it is
    moral even if tragic consequences result
  • Good will means that an act is taken because it
    is inherently right - not because it might yield
    a reward
  • Serious weakness - why leave out the potential
    consequences of an act when assessing its moral
    worth?

14
Ethical system Utilitarianism(Jeremy Bentham
andJohn Stuart Mill)
  • Teleological ethical system measures an
    actsgoodness according to its consequences
  • Purpose to produce the greatest benefit for all
    concerned - the best ratio of good to evil
  • Types
  • Act utilitarianism consideration limited to the
    utility gained from a specific act
  • Rule utilitarianism also consider an acts
    precedential and rule-setting values (e.g.,
    abortion)
  • Difficulties
  • Measuring benefits
  • Predicting consequences of acts
  • Little concern for individual rights
  • Example - throwing out an occupant of a lifeboat
    because it might otherwise sink

15
Ethical systemEthics of Care
  • What is good meets the needs of
    everyoneconcerned
  • Tries to maximize benefits for all
  • The individual is never sacrificed
  • Emphasis on empathy and compassion
  • Resolve situations through personal relationships
  • Less concerned with securing rights
  • In criminal justice, represented by
    rehabilitation instead of punishment
  • Peacemaking justice (Braswell and Gold)
  • Connectedness with each other and the Earth
  • Caring for each other
  • Mindfulness of others when making decisions

16
Ethical systemEgoism
  • Everything that contributes to individualhappines
    s is good
  • Individual comes before everything else
  • Psychological egoism
  • Humans naturally egoistic, unnatural to be
    otherwise
  • Even running into a burning building is egoistic
  • Enlightened egoism
  • Treat others in a way that you would want to be
    treated and you will benefit in the long term
  • Selflessness and altruism are actually egoistic
    because they give self-satisfaction
  • Individuals should focus on the long term
  • Basis for capitalism

17
Miscellaneous ethical systems and concepts
  • Imperative principle
  • Act according to a fixed rule
  • Utilitarian principle
  • Compares good and bad consequences
  • Generalization principle
  • What would happen if everyone acted this way?
  • Absolutism / Universalism
  • Absolutism If something is wrong, its always
    wrong
  • Universalism Rules apply to everyone,
    everywhere.
  • If rules dont always apply to everyone, why
    should people conform?
  • Relativism
  • No moral absolutes - what is good depends on
    individuals and groups
  • Cultural relativism
  • What is good is that which contributes to the
    health and survival of a society (e.g., depending
    on resources, euthanasia of elderly can be OK)
  • Definition of criminal behavior varies across
    societies

18
Ethical systemSituational Ethics
  • Attempt to reconcile relativism andabsolutism
  • Hinmans moral pluralism
  • There are basic principles of right and wrong
  • These principles can be applied to ethical
    dilemmas moral issues
  • Different results in different situations
  • Situational ethics applies basic ethical
    principles to resolve moral dilemmas
  • Adjusts according to the impact on all concerned
  • Example - arranged marriages may be OK if all
    agree and motives are consistent with care for
    the individual
  • Very close to
  • Rule-based utilitarianism
  • Flexible application of Kants categorical
    imperative
  • Consistent with ethics of care
  • Consistent with the golden rule

19
Resolve this ethical dilemma
  • While on patrol you pull over a car that is
    weaving all over the road. You walk up to the
    drivers side and discover the driver is your
    future father-in-law. He is drunk as a skunk.
    Your wedding is (was?) in three days.
  • Use the process on the next slide to resolve the
    dilemma.
  • What should you do?

20
Analyzing ethical dilemmas
  • Critical thinking is key
  • Separate facts from concepts
  • Identify underlying assumptions
  • Process
  • Identify the facts. What happened? What is known?
  • Identify relevant values (e.g., loyalty, duty,
    honesty, fairness) and concepts (e.g., due
    process, proportionality, equality)
  • Identify all moral dilemmas for each person
    involved. Be sure to identify relevant laws,
    agency regulations, professional codes and
    workplace standards.
  • Decide on the most immediate moral or ethical
    issue
  • Use an ethical system or other means to resolve
    the ethical or moral dilemma

21
Key ethical systems - review
  • Ethics of Virtue (Aristotle)
  • People not born good but become good by following
    a moral exemplar
  • Focus on character - not acts
  • Natural Law
  • Morality is part of the natural order there are
    universal rights and wrongs
  • What is good is what conforms to the natural
    order of things (e.g. preserving life)
  • Religion
  • Moral guidelines for how to live ones life.
    Gods will is beyond question.
  • Ethical formalism (Kant)
  • Concerned only with the nature of an act, not its
    consequences
  • Categorical imperative Could an act become a
    rule of nature? If so, it is good
  • Utilitarianism (Bentham and Mill)
  • Measures an acts goodness according to its
    consequences
  • Purpose to produce the greatest benefit for all
    concerned - the best ratio of good to evil
  • Ethics of care
  • What is good meets the needs of everyone. But the
    individual is never sacrificed.
  • Emphasis on empathy and compassion
  • Situational ethics
  • Attempt to reconcile relativism and absolutism
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