The State of Redemption - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

The State of Redemption

Description:

Postal survey (N=940) to test correlates of punitive attitudes ... define ... the way it was like he'd go on holiday with us and he'd end up banging all ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:59
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: qub7
Category:
Tags: redemption | state

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The State of Redemption


1
The State of Redemption
  • Do we believe that offenders can changeand does
    it matter?

Shadd Maruna University of Sheffield 11 October
2006
2
Cambridge University Public Opinion Project (or
C U Pop)
Postal survey (N940) to test correlates of
punitive attitudes among members of the public in
the east of England
Intensive interviewing of two, small, matched
samples (N20 and 20) of respondents scoring very
high and very low on punitiveness (over one SD
over the mean)
Experimenting with emotions Manipulating
emotional conditions and re-testing
punitiveness
3
Belief in Redeemability Scale
  • Alpha .64
  • Most offenders can go on to lead productive lives
    with help and hard work.
  • Even the worst offenders can grow out of criminal
    behaviour.
  • (R) Most offenders really have little hope of
    changing for the better.
  • (R) Some offenders are so damaged that they can
    never lead productive lives.

4
Who is this Public?
  • Random samples of postal addresses in 6 diverse
    communities (Bishops Stortford, Great Yarmouth,
    Kings Lynn, Knightsbridge, Stapleford, Tower
    Hamlets)
  • 51 consider themselves politically conservative.
  • 58 are female.
  • 68 have not completed a university degree.
  • 41 describe the household they were raised in as
    working class
  • 72 report their household income as under
    40,000
  • 43 are between the ages of 45 and 64.


    32 are between the
    ages of 25 and 44
    14 are between 65 and 74.
  • 6 report offenses more serious than a speeding
    violation.

5
Redeemability Beliefs (Alpha .77)
  • 86 agree that Most offenders can go on to lead
    productive lives with help and hard work
  • 77 agree that Even the worst offenders can grow
    out of criminal behaviour.
  • 68 DISagree that Most offenders really have
    little hope of changing for the better (R)
  • But
  • 67 agree that Some offenders are so damaged
    that they can never lead productive lives

6
(No Transcript)
7
Does this public believe offenders can change?
  • Yes, slightly
  • But, does it matter?

8
Measuring Punitiveness Beyond Retributivism
versus Rehabilitation
  • Previous definitions of Punitiveness
  • punitive refers to actionsthat seek
    relatively immediate retribution toward those
    responsible for a social problem (Gault
    Sabini, 2000 499)
  • a relatively broad, normative orientation toward
    retribution society is being too soft on
    criminals. (Duffee Ritti 1977 p. 453)
  • unlike justice, the desire for vengeance-driven
    punishment is personal. Its purpose is not to
    restore equity but to give the avenger relief
    from a feeling of discomfort (often anger). It
    is not necessarily rational. (Ho et al 2002
    375)
  • that rehabilitation does not work, and that
    criminals should be punished (Langworthy
    Whitehead, 1986 p.575)

9
We define punitiveness as
  • The degree of ones support for harsh sanctions
    for offenders with particular attention to
  • Duration (when offenders are punished they dont
    get enough time),
  • Prevalence (too many offenders get off) and,
  • Intensity (if offenders do get time, it is easy
    time). 

10
Punitiveness Scale Alpha.82
  • Id consider volunteering my time or donating
    money to an organisation that supported
    toughening the sentencing laws in the UK.
  • We should bring back the death penalty for
    serious crimes.
  • With most offenders, we need to condemn more and
    understand less.
  • My general view towards offenders is that they
    should be treated harshly.
  • (R) Prisoners should have access to televisions
    or gym facilities.
  • (R) If prison has to be used, it should be used
    sparingly and only as a last option.
  • (R) Id consider volunteering my time or donating
    money to an organisation that supported
    alternatives to prison.
  • (R) Probation or a community sentence (rather
    than prison) is appropriate for a person found
    guilty of burglary for the second time.

11
How punitive is this public?
  • 54 want the death penalty back.
  • 36 would consider volunteering for an
    organisation that supported toughening the
    sentencing laws in the UK.
  • 35 agree with most offenders, we need to
    condemn more and understand less.
  • 36 would consider volunteering for an
    organisation that supported alternatives to
    prison.
  • 47 agree that if prison has to be used, it
    should be used sparingly and only as a last
    option. Need to give distribution of punitive
    scores.

12
Distribution of punitiveness
x3.6, s.d. 1, range 1-6 18.7 of the
sample scored one s.d. below the mean 16.5 of
the sample scored one s.d. above the mean 
13
Previous Findings on Punitiveness
See esp. Allen, 2002, Rethinking Crime and
Punishment findings
  • Women are less punitive in their views than men.
  • People in lower social classes have more punitive
    attitudes than those in class A/B.
  • The most punitive demographic subgroups in the UK
    are older, lower class and conservative.
  • Education is the best predictor of punitiveness
    (the more educ, the less punitive)

14
Instrumental Explanations
  • Previous Victimisation Experiences
  • Fear of Crime
  • Crime Salience (i.e. subjective sense that crime
    is a serious problem in the UK)
  • Instrumental predictors do not relate
    consistently to punitiveness (Baron Hartnagel,
    1996 Tyler Boeckman, 1997 Vikki Wood, 2002)

15
Beliefs About the Nature of Crime
  • George B. Vold (1958 258) There is an obvious
    and logical interdependence between what is done
    about crime and what is assumed to be the reason
    for or explanation of criminality.

16
Positivists Versus Classicists
  • Cullen and colleagues (1985) suggest two primary
    orientations toward crime
  • Classical (crime as a choice)
  • Positivist (crime as the product of social
    forces)
  • Those who hold a classical understanding of crime
    causation and hence believe that crime flourishes
    because it is a rational, utilitarian enterprise
    will be more punitive than those positivists
    who see crime as a manifestation of social
    constraint and social ills

17
Where does redeemability fit in?
  • Heiders (1958) Dispositional Attributions
    (internal) vs. Situational Attributions
    (external)
  • Weiner (1972, 1974) 2-dimensional model of
    attributions
  • The Locus of control (Internal-External)
    dimension has more inconsistent correlates than
    do stability or globality, it is less reliably
    assessed and there are theoretical grounds for
    doubting that it has a direct impact on
    expectations per se (Peterson, 2000 48 see
    also Weiner and Graham 1999 Wilson and Linville
    1985).

18
Criminal Attribution Scale (Alpha .69)
  • 1.(R) Crime is mostly the product of a persons
    circumstances and social context.
  • 2.Crime is a choice a persons social
    circumstances arent to blame.
  • 3.People commit crime because they want to.
  • 4. (R) Some people are predisposed to crime due
    to the way they were born or raised.

19
Predictors of Punitive Attitudes
20
Four Camps
21
Beyond Promoting Positivism
  • A sizable proportion of the population agrees
    that crime is not a free choice and so
    sympathises with offenders, but still wants them
    kept away from them at all costs on the
    assumption that they are so damaged that they are
    now dangerous.

22
Highly Punitive Case Example
  • SM Does prison work as a penalty?
  • What I would like to see is the old type prison
    where there was bread and water, I just think
    that todays prison is like a holiday camp to
    them. I dont see it as a deterrent even if they
    go to prison. I dont really know what like
    Holloway and all those are, but I think these
    people really need to have everything taken away
    from them. Bring back boot camp.

23
Positivist Explanation for Crime
  • R Weve got so many young, unmarried mothers
    who have children and they swear and you see them
    walking down the streetsthey dont have them for
    the right reasons. We just had a collection box
    stolen out of the shop by a group of 11-15 year
    olds. Theyre known as the evil six. They
    just like get into everything. Into every shop,
    they plague everyone theyre rude to everybody.
    Theyll go straight thru a shop and use a toilet
    or take a handbag or whatever. They constantly
    plague the town and you know they all come from
    broken homes or one parent families.

24
Case study in (non) redeemability
  • SM Can you think of any offenders you know
    personally?
  • R Yeah, hes a young boy who is in my sons
    class. He had a habit of stealing cars before he
    could drive with his friends and he nearly killed
    his self in an accident. But, it dont seem to
    teach him anything. I dont know if hes out of
    hospital. His leg was broke, he was in no
    danger, but he comes from a broken home, he
    doesnt seem to learn by it.
  • SM What would help in his particular situation?
  • R When he was a little boy, I think he just
    wanted his parents to be there for him and they
    were doing their own thing. He didnt want it to
    be the way it was like hed go on holiday with us
    and hed end up banging all the food machines.
    He would from the age of 4 or 5 he would just cry
    and say he didnt want to be like that, but his
    brothers are like that and hes just fell into
    that.

25
  • SM Is he trapped do you think? Does he have a
    chance?
  • R I dont think hes got a chance, no. He
    dont know any different because hes the
    youngest one of, I think hes got 2 or 3 brothers
    all by different fathers like and I dont think
    he stands a chance now. I dont think theres
    any hope for him.
  • SM Whats the best the system can do in his
    case?
  • R I dont know. I spoke to the ambulance
    driver that picked him up and he just wanted to
    take him in a field and smack him because hes
    angry with him because we know him. But, I dont
    know what the system can do for him to be quite
    honest. I think he is beyond that. He hasnt
    done - as far as I know he hasnt stole from
    shops, he just has this fascination with cars.
    He just wants speed.

26
But where do we get our redeemability beliefs?

27
Redeemability Starts at Home
  • Well you do see kids that are a bit rude hanging
    around street corners and, you know, breaking in
    cars, and no respect, the whole, general, its
    there. But, I think to an extent that always has
    been. I dont, I think its just a bit of peer
    pressure, Im assuming. I think, actually that
    they do grow out of it. I think my brothers, as
    teenagers, just hideous, vile kids. they grew
    out of it. I also had a nasty cousin horrible,
    horrible little boy. Lovely now. So, in the
    last five years hes suddenly got a job and hes
    fantastic. I really thought he was an absolute
    no-hoper. (Female, 41 yrs, Tower Hamlet).
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com