Punishment and Political Theory

Professor Matt Matravers editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:1st Nov '98

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Punishment and Political Theory cover

This book brings together moral and legal philosophers,criminologists and political theorists in an attempt to address the interdependence of the study of punishment and of political theory as well as specific issues, such as freedom, autonomy, coercion and rights that arise in both. In addition to new essays on the compatibility of rights and utilitarianism and of autonomy and coercion in Kant's theory, the book contains an extended treatment of the idea of punishment as communication. This theme is taken up in arguments over whether punishment is communicative, in the questions of what the content of any such communication could be in a pluralist society, and whether communicative accounts can make sense of the use of 'hard treatment'. By combining the techniques and expertise of different disciplines, the essays in this book shed new light on the problem of punishment. They also demonstrate the usefulness of that problem as a testing ground for legal and moral philosophy.

Individually, the articles comprising Punishment and Legal Theory are insightful; and, taken together, provide an important theoretical examination of the communicative theory of punishment. Lawrence Buhagiar, Carleton University Current Issues in Criminal Justice September 2002

ISBN: 9781901362886

Dimensions: 234mm x 156mm x 14mm

Weight: unknown

184 pages