The criminal justice
system comprises many distinct stages, including arrest, prosecution, trial,
sentencing, and punishment (quite often in the form of imprisonment).
Rehabilitation can take place in any of these phases as the police for example
can impose on the spot penalties and cautions but these are not controversial
it is in the last two of these many stages that there is debate over whether
the criminal justice system should focus more on rehabilitation than on
retribution.
Rehabilitation is the
idea of reforming a prisoner so that they can reintegrate back into society
upon their release. This process involves various programs including anger
management, education programs and even creative workshops to form another
outlet for expression. It is hoped that through this process they will become
less inclined to commit crimes in the future. It seeks to prevent a person from
reoffending by taking away the desire to offend. This is very different from
the idea of ‘deterrence’ (which is the idea of making him afraid to offend,
though he may still desire to), and the idea of ‘incapacitation’ (which is the
idea of taking away his physical power to offend, though he may still desire to
and be unafraid to) however even under these theories the assumption is that
after the offender has spent their time they will be much less of a threat to
society, can be released and will not reoffend.
The retributive idea
is that punishment should be determined chiefly (possibly even only) by the
seriousness of the crime itself, and not by consequentialist factors, such as
whether the punishment is enough to scare (i.e. deter) the rest of society. The
term ‘retribution’ is therefore unfortunate because its everyday meaning
connotes ‘revenge’; it is better described as ‘desert’, ‘just deserts’ or
‘proportionality’ theory.
Crimes such as murder or other equally severe crimes do deserve
imprisonment as a punishment, rehabilitation should be considered for lesser
crimes, for example those caught looting during the August riots in the UK. For
these offenders, particularly for those who were first time offenders,
imprisonment would only add to their anger against the government and police. Whereas
rehabilitation, it the form of education and helping rebuild houses/businesses
damaged by the riots, this would work on reforming their attitudes and
perceptions of the UKs legal system and therefore they would more easily
integrate into society. Almost all non-violent and crimes against property
would be better met with rehabilitation rather than lengthy imprisonment.
Pros
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Cons
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Rehabilitation Is A Better General Justifying Aim for
Punishment. Rehabilitation is the most
valuable ideological justification for imprisonment, for it alone promotes
the humanising belief in the notion that offenders can be saved and not
simply punished. Desert (retributive) theory, on the other hand, sees
punishment as an end in itself, in other words, punishment for punishment’s
sake. This has no place in any enlightened society.
An example can be taken from the aftermath of the
London rioters, where 170 riot offenders under 18 are now in custody without
firstly understanding the causes of the riots nor the reasons of why these
people offended.
The rehabilitative ideal does not ignore society and
the victim. In fact it is because retribution places such great value on the
prisoner’s rights that it tries so hard to change the offender and prevent
his reoffending. By seeking to reduce reoffending and to reduce crime, it
seeks constructively to promote the safety of the public, and to protect
individuals from the victimisation of crime. The public agrees; a 2008 poll
of British citizens found 82% ‘thought rehabilitation was as important, or
more important than punishment as a criterion when sentencing criminals’.
Such a model of punishment is therefore a more
enlightened approach in a modern day criminal justice system. Our current
system which focuses more on retribution does not have the possibility of
seeking to prevent reoffending by curing the offender of their desire to
reoffend.
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A sanction should
not merely be helpful – it should treat the offending conduct as wrong. The
purpose of punishment is to show disapproval for the offender’s wrongdoing,
and to clearly condemn his criminal actions. This is what was and is being
done with the offenders of the August riots, the most common example is of an
the two men who attempted to organise riots using Facebook, both were sentenced
to four years and shows societies disgust in the events of the riots and acts
as a message for future.
A prison sentence is
as much a punishment for the offender as a symbol of the reaction of society.
Society creates law as an expression of the type of society we are aiming to
create. This is why we punish; we punish to censure (retribution), we do not
punish merely to help a person change for the better (rehabilitation). We
still have to punish a robber or a murderer, even if he is truly sorry and
even if he would really, really never offend again and even if we could
somehow tell that for certain. This is because justice, and not
rehabilitation, makes sense as the justification for punishment.
Why is justice and
censure (‘retribution’) so important? Because unless the criminal justice
system responds to persons who have violated society’s rules by
communicating, through punishment, the censure of that offending conduct, the
system will fail to show society that it takes its own rules (and the breach
of them) seriously. There are other important reasons as well: such as to
convey to victims the acknowledgement that they have been wronged.
Punishment, in other words, may be justified by the aim of achieving
‘justice’ and ‘desert’, and not by the aim of rehabilitation.
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Rehabilitation Has Greater Regard For the Offender. Rehabilitation has another important value – it
recognises the reality of social inequity. To say that some offenders need
help to be rehabilitated is to accept the idea that circumstances can
constrain, if not compel, and lead to criminality; it admits that we can help
unfortunate persons who have been overcome by their circumstance. It rejects
the idea that individuals, regardless of their position in the social order,
exercise equal freedom in deciding whether to commit a crime, and should be
punished equally according to their offence, irrespective of their social
backgrounds. Prisons are little more than schools of crime if there aren't
any rehabilitation programs. Prisons isolate offenders from their families
and friends so that when they are released their social networks tend to be
made up largely of those whom they met in prison. As well as sharing ideas,
prisoners may validate each others’ criminal activity. Employers are less
willing to employ those who have been to prison. Such circumstances may
reduce the options available to past offenders and make future criminal
behaviour more likely. Rehabilitation becomes more difficult. In addition,
rates of self-harm and abuse are alarmingly high within both men’s and
women’s prisons. In 2006 alone, there were 11,503 attempts by women to
self-harm in British prisons. This suggests that imprisoning offenders
unnecessarily is harmful both for the offenders themselves and for society as
a whole.
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Crime is not
pathology, it is not the product of circumstance, and it is certainly not the
product of coincidence. As the case of Husng Guangyu shows, despite being
Chinas richest man he still committed crimes involving illegal business
dealing, insider trading and bribery and was then sentenced to 14 years. This
was rightly given in order as a just punishment for the cost of the crimes he
had committed and to deter others from such practices. Crime is the result of
choices made by the individual, and therefore the justice system must condemn
those choices when they violate society’s rules. To say otherwise (i.e. to
say that criminals are merely the product of their unfortunate circumstances)
would be an insult to human autonomy - the liberalist idea that our judicial
system is based on, in saying that individuals are given the power to make
their own decisions freely and this should be interfered with in as little as
possible. It would be to deny the possibility of human actors making good
decisions in the face of hardship.
Retributivism alone
best recognises the offender’s status as a moral agent, by asking that he
take responsibility for what he has done, rather than to make excuses for it.
It appeals to an inherent sense of right and wrong, and in this way is the
most respectful to humanity because it recognises that persons are indeed
fundamentally capable of moral deliberation, no matter what their personal
circumstances are.
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The needs of society
are not being met by those who reoffend due to lack of rehabilitation. The
fact that two thirds of offenders subsequently re-offend with two years
suggests that the prison system does little to encourage people to stay on
the right side of the law. Clearly, the threat of prison is not enough alone
and needs to be supplemented by other schemes.
Prisons can provide
an opportunity to develop important skills: it is especially clear in the
case of non-violent offenders that criminal behaviour often stems from a
perceived lack of alternatives. Offenders often lack educational
qualifications and skills. Prisons can provide an opportunity to develop
necessary skills for future employment through the provision of courses and
education. The UK offers courses in bricklaying, hairdressing, gardening and
teaching sport and fitness.
These people can
then contribute back into society rather than a purely retributive model
which just takes from a system.
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Rehabilitation Does Not Serve The Needs of Society. The primary goal of our criminal justice system is to
remove offenders from general society and protect law abiding citizens. Many
criminals are repeat offenders and rehabilitation can be a long and expensive
process. In Jamaica, police claim repeat offenders are responsible for over
80% of local crime despite rehabilitation programmes in prisons. Ideally
therefore, retribution and rehabilitation should work hand in hand to protect
citizens in the short and long term. There are some successful examples of
this happening, where prisons encourage inmates to take part in group activities
such as football. Some prisons have started cooking programmes where inmates
learn to cook in a professional environment and leave with a qualification.
However the first priority is the removal of the convicted criminal from
society in order to protect the innocent. Rehabilitation should be a
secondary concern. The primary concern of the criminal justice system should
be the protection of the non-guilty parties. The needs of society are
therefore met by the immediate removal of the offender.
In addition a more retributive approach serves society
through the message it conveys. Most modern defences of retribution would
emphasize its role in reinforcing the moral values of society and expressing
the public's outrage at certain crimes. Rehabilitation therefore weakens the
strong message of disgust as to the offender’s actions that a traditional
prison sentence symbolises and the deterrent that it thus provides.
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If we had the opportunity to stop some offenders
re-offending why do we not seize this opportunity? Rehabilitative programs
provide such an opportunity. Such programs include cognitive-behavioural
programs (say, trying to get a violent offender to think and reach
differently to potential ‘trigger’ situations), pro-social modelling
programmes, and some sex-offender treatment programs. Of course, certain
styles will suit some better than others, but this is someone that will have
to determined case by case. As some methods with work better than others
depending on attitudes, values etc.
The most credible research (done by a technique called
meta-analysis) demonstrates that the net effect of treatment is, on average,
a positive reduction of overall recidivism (reoffending) rates of between 10%
and 12%, which would promote a reduction in crime that is, by criminal
standards, massive.
Rehabilitation is a concept. It is not a definite
technique whose effectiveness can be precisely measured. So yes some forms of
rehabilitation may not work, others however might. What the opposition to
this argues is what we've deemed rehabilitation is what we will utiize going
forward. However, this is illogical; as we speak, new methods of
rehabilitation could be concocted. Such an indefinite ideal cannot be proven
as ineffective. For example, if somebody proves that high-speel monorail
transportation is ineffective, this does not mean that transportation is
absolutely and fundamentally flawed. One simply cannot disprove an infinite
set of hypotheses.
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Rehabilitation
Doesn’t Actually Work. While some
rehabilitative programmes work with some offenders (those who would probably
change by themselves anyway), most do not. Many programs cannot overcome, or
even appreciably reduce, the powerful tendency for offenders to continue in
criminal behaviour. In Britain, where rehabilitation has long been purported
to stop re-offending, 58 per cent of those over-21 find themselves in trouble
with the law within two years of release. The rehabilitation programs simply
do not work. ‘Rehabilitation’ is therefore a false promise – and the danger
with such an illusory and impossible goal is that it is used as a front to
justify keeping offenders locked up for longer than they deserve and
sometimes even indefinitely (‘if we keep him here longer maybe he might
change’). We cannot justify passing any heavier or more onerous a sentence on
a person in the name of “rehabilitation” if “rehabilitation” does not work.
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The expense of re-offenders re-entering the system is
also an expense that our prison system cannot afford. A system such as
counselling for released prisoners would prove to be inexpensive when weighed
against the benefits of decreased crime, and all the costs involved in that
(public damage, judicial costs and prison costs). Given that many
organisations work in rehabilitation programs in prisons for very little, if
any, payment such a system could easily be established for counselling.
A complete system of rehabilitation and post-release
counselling, to access these programs, should be paired with increased
awareness programs in schools and welfare support. However, this system of
combating crime is not complete without a comprehensive system of
rehabilitation. If we truly want to protect society and reform criminals then
we must invest more time, effort and funding into a system that can achieve
this. Incarceration on its own is not working and it is time for change. An
addition to the rehabilitation programme was aired on the UK television in
November 2011, a new scheme where the offender meets their victim(s) in order
to understand their actions have consequences. This type of programme can
show visible changes or responses of the offenders as they agree to talk
about their feelings and show remorse.
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How Would One Know a
System of Rehabilitation Is Really Working. The question “does it work” must be joined by the second question: “even
if it does work, how can you tell, with each individual offender, when it has
worked?” How would we check if this system is really working? Tagging
prisoners? Free counselling for the prisoner for the rest of their life?
These measures would require huge administration costs and then the question
follows would it even be feasible to enforce such a system?
The root of
criminality exists before exposure to the prison system; otherwise criminals
would have no reason to be there in the first place. What may be more
sensible is to analyse the root causes of what makes criminals offend in the
first instance and introduce reform to counteract it, for example the
economic crisis.
Some have cited the
education system as failing to instil a sense of morality in people. Others
suggest that a lack of welfare leads individuals to lose faith in society and
therefore be unwilling to follow the law. Assuming that the right time to
change people’s outlook on society is after they have offended is naïve –
criminal urges are better ‘nipped in the bud’.
It could be argued that criminal mentalities are
inherent within certain individuals, either due to their inborn psyche or
their upbringing. If one accepts this, then basic rehabilitation into society
is going to do little to stop re-offending, whereas incarceration will keep
them in a position where they cannot offend. Allowing them easy passage back
into the world, with minimal supervision, could provide a gateway for them to
commit more serious crimes.
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Philosopher Peter Landry believes that it takes a whole
group of specialists to determine what kind of punishment to mete out to
criminals. There is no hard and fast rule. Money spent on rehabilitation may
cost a lot, but is well worth it, when you consider cuts to the rate of
reoffending, leading to reduced expense related to those who reoffend and
less crowded prisons. In Britain, it costs £140,000 a year to jail a young
criminal, imagine if that money was spent on his or her rehabilitation
instead? Furthermore, in America, where measures like the ‘three-strike
policy’ were introduced and rehabilitation discouraged, ‘more than four out
of ten adult American offenders still return to prison within three years of
their release’.[3] Retribution simply does not work, and it is certainly not
saving the government any money.
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Rehabilitation
Constitutes an Unjustifiable Further Expense. The evidence from all over the world suggests that recidivism rates are
difficult to reduce and that some offenders just can’t be rehabilitated. It
therefore makes economic sense to cut all rehabilitation programs and
concentrate on ensuring that prisoners serve the time they deserve for their
crimes and are kept off the streets where they are bound to re-offend. As it
can be seen that some deserving of a longer sentence only receive short
sentences due to lack of time and space and some who have committed shorter
sentences are given long sentences aimed at making a point or sending a
message.
Currently, the government will continue to be gambling
tax payers’ money on programs that will not give anything back into the
society that it took from. Britain spends £45,000 a year on each of its
prisoners and yet 50% will go on to re-offend, ‘which translates into a dead
investment of £2 billion annually. Rehabilitation programs should be scrapped
and taxpayers asked only to pay the bare minimum to keep offenders off the
streets. They can’t harm society if they are behind bars.
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