Rights and Wrongs : Rethinking the Foundations of Criminal Justice, Paperback / softback Book

Rights and Wrongs : Rethinking the Foundations of Criminal Justice Paperback / softback

Part of the Critical Criminological Perspectives series

Paperback / softback

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This book seeks to explain why the concept of justice is critical to the study of criminal justice.

Heffernan makes such a case by treating state-sponsored punishment as the defining feature of criminal justice.

In particular, this work accounts for the state’s role as a surrogate for victims of wrongdoing, and so makes it possible to integrate victimology scholarship into its justice-based framework.

In arguing that punishment may be imposed only for wrongdoing, the book proposes a criterion for repudiating the legal paternalism that informs drug-possession laws.

Rethinking the Foundations of Criminal Justice outlines steps for taming the state’s power to punish offenders; in particular, it draws on restorative justice research to outline possibilities for a penology that emphasizes offenders’ humanity.

Through its examination of equality issues, the book integrates recent work on the social justice/criminal justice connection into the scholarly literature on punishment, and so will particularly appeal to those interested in criminal justice theory.   

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