Review essay: three lenses on race, crime, and justice
Content Type Journal ArticlePages 299-306DOI 10.1007/s10611-009-9220-2Authors
Gregg Barak, Eastern Michigan University Department of Sociology, Anthropology & Criminology 712 Pray-Harrold [...]
Jane Wood and Theresa Gannon (eds.), Public Opinion and Criminal Justice
Content Type Journal ArticlePages 207-209DOI 10.1007/s10611-009-9219-8Authors
Julian V. Roberts, University of Oxford Centre for Criminology Faculty of Law Manor Road [...]
Abstract In this paper, I seek to undermine G.A. Cohen’s polemical use of a metaethical claim he makes in his article, ‘Facts and Principles’,
by arguing that that use requires an unsustainable equivocation between epistemic and logical grounding. I begin by distinguishing
three theses that Cohen has offered during the course of his critique of Rawls and contractualism more generally, the foundationalism
about grounding thesis, the justice as non-regulative thesis, and the justice as all-encompassing thesis, and briefly argue
that they are analytically independent of each other. I then offer an outline of the foundationalism about grounding thesis,
characterising it, as Cohen does, as a demand of logic. That thesis claims that whenever a normative principle is dependent
on a fact, it is so dependent in virtue of some other principle. I then argue that although this is true as a matter of logic,
it, as Cohen admits, cannot be true of actual justifications, since logic cannot tell us anything about the truth as opposed
to the validity of arguments. Facts about a justification cannot then be decisive for whether or not a given argument violates
the foundationalism about grounding thesis. As long as, independently of actual justifications, theorists can point to plausible
logically grounding principles, as I argue contractualists can, Cohen’s thesis lacks critical bite.
Abstract Retributive approaches to the justification of legal punishment are often thought to place exacting and unattractive demands
on state officials, requiring them to expend scarce public resources on apprehending and punishing all offenders strictly
in accordance with their criminal ill deserts. Against this caricature of the theory, I argue that retributivists can urge
parsimony in the use of punishment. After clarifying what parsimony consists in, I show how retributivists can urge reductions
in the use of punishment in order to conserve scarce resources for other valuable social purposes, minimize the foreseeable
and adverse effects of legal punishment on the innocent, and accommodate the fact that existing societies fail in numerous
ways to satisfy the conditions that make retributive punishment fully justified.
Content Type Journal Article
DOI 10.1007/s11158-009-9101-7
Authors
Richard L. Lippke, Indiana University Bloomington USA
Abstract Granting differential treatment is often considered a way of placing some groups in a better position in order to maintain
or improve their cultural, economic, health-related or other conditions, and to address persistent inequalities. Critics of
multiculturalism have pointed out the tension between protection for groups and protection for group members. The ‘rule-and-exemption’
approach has generally been conceived as more resistant to such criticism insofar as exemptions are not conceded to minorities
or ethical and religious groups as such, but to individuals who are part of those groups. However, I show that when a government
grants an exemption, it inevitably provides a definition of the relevant group in question, and the tendency is to take cultural
membership as ‘given’ or as defined by group spokespersons. I discuss some problems related to these definitions and defend
instead a definition based on shared group interests.
Content Type Journal Article
DOI 10.1007/s11158-009-9095-1
Authors
Maria Paola Ferretti, University of Bremen INIIS, Centre for International and Intercultural Studies Bremen 28359 Germany
Book Review: Covert human intelligence; a view from the police
Content Type Journal ArticlePages 205-206DOI 10.1007/s10611-009-9218-9Authors
James Sheptycki, York University Division of Social Science Ross Building, S726 Toronto ON M3J 1P3 [...]