ABSTRACT

The enormous financial cost of criminal justice has motivated increased scrutiny and recognition of the need for constructive change, but what of the ethical costs of current practices and policies? Moreover, if we seriously value the principles of liberal democracy then there is no question that the ethics of criminal justice are everybody’s business, concerns for the entire society. The Routledge Handbook of Criminal Justice Ethics brings together international scholars to explore the most significant ethical issues throughout their many areas of expertise, anchoring their discussions in the empirical realities of the issues faced rather than applying moral theory at a distance. Contributions from philosophers, legal scholars, criminologists and psychologists bring a fresh and interdisciplinary approach to the field.

The Handbook is divided into three parts:

  • Part I addresses the core issues concerning criminal sanction, the moral and political aspects of the justification of punishment, and the relationship between law and morality.
  • Part II examines criminalization and criminal liability, and the assumptions and attitudes shaping those aspects of contemporary criminal justice.
  • Part III evaluates current policies and practices of criminal procedure, exploring the roles of police, prosecutors, judges, and juries and suggesting directions for revising how criminal justice is achieved.

Throughout, scholars seek pathways for change and suggest new solutions to address the central concerns of criminal justice ethics.

This book is an ideal resource for upper-undergraduate and postgraduate students taking courses in criminal justice ethics, criminology, and criminal justice theory, and also for students of philosophy interested in punishment, law and society, and law and ethics.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

part |95 pages

Morality, law, and criminal justice

part |106 pages

Criminalization, decriminalization, and punishment

chapter |13 pages

Retributive desert and deterrence

How both cohere in a single justification of punishment

chapter |18 pages

The ethics of criminalisation

Intentions and consequences

chapter |19 pages

De-moralising retributivism

Agency, blame, and humanity in criminal law theory and practice

chapter |13 pages

Justice, but not as ‘we' know it

Anticipatory risk, pre-emption, and ethics

part |171 pages

Institutions, policies, and practices

chapter |19 pages

Enabling and constraining police power

On the moral regulation of policing

chapter |19 pages

Deliberating racial justice

Toward racially democratic crime control

chapter |22 pages

Ethical perspectives on interrogation

An analysis of contemporary techniques

chapter |22 pages

The moral ecology of policing

A mind science approach to race and policing in the United States

chapter |18 pages

Hunting gruffalo with a blunderbuss

On the ethics of constructing and responding to english youth gangs