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Is offender rehabilitation a form of punishment?

journal contribution
posted on 2010-11-01, 00:00 authored by Tony Ward
This paper examines the consequences of the overlap between punishment and rehabilitation practices, and inquires into the implications for individuals who assess and treat offenders. More specifically, I make three claims concerning the relationship between offender rehabilitation and punishment. First, rehabilitation as it is commonly understood in the offending arena contains some components that meet the criteria for punishment, in the ethical sense of that term. It is also true that there are aspects of rehabilitation that are focused directly on assisting offenders to live better lives (higher levels of well-being) and therefore which do not meet the criteria for punishment. Second, there are a number of significant practice implications that follow from the hybrid nature of offender rehabilitation. Third, Duff's communicative theory of punishment (Duff, 2001) offers clinicians a stronger justification for the punishment aspects of rehabilitation than its retributive and consequential rivals.

History

Journal

British journal of forensic practice

Volume

12

Issue

4

Pagination

4 - 13

Publisher

Pier Professional

Location

Hove, England

ISSN

1463-6646

Language

eng

Publication classification

C2.1 Other contribution to refereed journal

Copyright notice

2010, Pier Professional (now Emerald)

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