Many people believe that retribution is morally flawed and problematic in concept and practice, however I think that the punitive system recognises levels of retribution – for the victim, the victim’s loved ones, and for society as a whole.
But, to take a life when a life has been lost is not justice, it’s revenge.
The main argument that retribution is immoral is that it is just a sanitised form of vengeance. Scenes of howling mobs attacking prison vans containing those accused of murder on their way to and from court, or chanting aggressively outside prisons when an offender is being executed, suggest that vengeance remains a major ingredient in the public popularity of capital punishment. But just retribution, designed to re-establish justice, can easily be distinguished from vengeance and vindictiveness.
The issue of the execution of innocent persons is also a problem for the retribution argument - if there is a serious risk of executing the innocent then one of the key principles of retribution - that people should get what they deserve (and therefore only what they deserve) - is violated by the current implementation of capital punishment in the USA, and any other country where errors have taken place.
Why do we treat killing so differently to other crimes? Rapists are not themselves raped, people guilty of assault are not beaten up as punishment (or deterrence). Therefore, the death penalty is both cruel and unusual in that regard and seems to serve a human need to exact revenge.
Camus and Dostoevsky argued that the retribution in the case of the death penalty was not fair, because the anticipatory suffering of the criminal before execution would probably outweigh the anticipatory suffering of the victim of their crime.
Others argue that the retribution argument is flawed because the death penalty delivers a 'double punishment'; that of the execution and the preceding wait, and this is a mismatch to the crime.
Some people who believe there is a place for retribution in sentencing oppose capital punishment because they feel the death penalty provides insufficient retribution. They argue that life imprisonment without possibility of parole causes much more suffering to the offender than a painless death after a short period of imprisonment. I’m of that belief
As society develops and we become more aware of our own motivations and limitations, what purpose does retribution have today? Is it an outmoded concept - or does it have a place in a civilised society?
But, to take a life when a life has been lost is not justice, it’s revenge.
The main argument that retribution is immoral is that it is just a sanitised form of vengeance. Scenes of howling mobs attacking prison vans containing those accused of murder on their way to and from court, or chanting aggressively outside prisons when an offender is being executed, suggest that vengeance remains a major ingredient in the public popularity of capital punishment. But just retribution, designed to re-establish justice, can easily be distinguished from vengeance and vindictiveness.
The issue of the execution of innocent persons is also a problem for the retribution argument - if there is a serious risk of executing the innocent then one of the key principles of retribution - that people should get what they deserve (and therefore only what they deserve) - is violated by the current implementation of capital punishment in the USA, and any other country where errors have taken place.
Why do we treat killing so differently to other crimes? Rapists are not themselves raped, people guilty of assault are not beaten up as punishment (or deterrence). Therefore, the death penalty is both cruel and unusual in that regard and seems to serve a human need to exact revenge.
Camus and Dostoevsky argued that the retribution in the case of the death penalty was not fair, because the anticipatory suffering of the criminal before execution would probably outweigh the anticipatory suffering of the victim of their crime.
Others argue that the retribution argument is flawed because the death penalty delivers a 'double punishment'; that of the execution and the preceding wait, and this is a mismatch to the crime.
Some people who believe there is a place for retribution in sentencing oppose capital punishment because they feel the death penalty provides insufficient retribution. They argue that life imprisonment without possibility of parole causes much more suffering to the offender than a painless death after a short period of imprisonment. I’m of that belief
As society develops and we become more aware of our own motivations and limitations, what purpose does retribution have today? Is it an outmoded concept - or does it have a place in a civilised society?