File #2738: "2019_Book_RightsAndWrongs.pdf"

2019_Book_RightsAndWrongs.pdf

Text

1|Contents|6
1|List of Tables|8
1|Introduction|9
1|Part I From Retaliation to Criminal Justice|13
1|1 Thinking About Justice|14
2|An Evaluative Concept|15
2|Identifying Rights|17
2|A Question of Motivation|22
1|2 Thinking About Criminal Justice|25
2|The Lex Talionis Framework of Negative Reciprocity|27
2|The Possibility of Dispensing Entirely with Negative Reciprocity|30
2|Negative Reciprocity Once Again: Impartial Imposition of Punishment for Malicious Violations of the Fair Terms of Cooperation|35
2|Criminal Justice|39
1|3 Redressing Grievances: The Retaliation Model|48
2|The Pure Retaliation Model|51
2|Moving Away from the Pure Retaliation Model: The Medieval State as a Weak Enforcement Agency|54
1|4 Redressing Grievances: The Criminal Justice Model|67
2|Moving Toward the Criminal Justice Model: The Rise of the Modern State|70
2|The Possibility of Taming State Power|83
1|Part II Taming the Power of the State|88
1|5 Decriminalization|89
2|The Eligibility Principle and Decriminalization|90
2|The Eligibility Principle’s Ramifications|92
1|6 Policing the Police|101
2|Stop and Frisk|103
2|Systematic Surveillance of Behavior in Public Places|108
1|7 State-Imposed Punishment|116
2|Whether, What Kind, and How Much Questions Bearing on Punishment|117
2|Prison Conditions: The State’s Carceral Responsibility for Inmates|125
1|8 Equality: Racial and Class Disparities in State-Imposed Punishment|131
2|Retail vs. Wholesale Approaches to Criminal Justice|134
2|The Possibility of Achieving Equal Justice on a Case by Case Basis|138
1|Afterword|147
1|Index|149