VULNERABILITY AND JUST DESERT: A THEORY OF SENTENCING AND MENTAL ILLNESS

被引:0
|
作者
Johnston, E. Lea [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Florida, Levin Coll Law, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF CRIMINAL LAW & CRIMINOLOGY | 2013年 / 103卷 / 01期
关键词
POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER; PHYSICAL VICTIMIZATION; PSYCHIATRIC-DISORDERS; SOLITARY CONFINEMENT; EXPRESSIVE THEORIES; PRISON; PUNISHMENT; INMATES; JAILS; STATE;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
DF [法律]; D9 [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
This Article analyzes risks of serious harms posed to prisoners with major mental disorders and investigates their import for sentencing under a just deserts analysis. Drawing upon social science research, the Article first establishes that offenders with serious mental illnesses are more likely than non-ill offenders to suffer physical and sexual assaults, endure housing in solitary confinement, and experience psychological deterioration during their carceral terms. The Article then explores the significance of this differential impact for sentencing within a retributive framework It first suggests a particular expressive understanding of punishment, capacious enough to encompass foreseeable, substantial risks of serious harm proximately caused by the state during confinement and addresses in particular the troublesome issue of prison violence. It then turns to just desert theory and principles of ordinal and cardinal proportionality to identify three ways in which vulnerability to serious harm may factor into sentencing. In so doing, the Article advances the current debate about the relevance of individual suffering to retributivism and lays the theoretical groundwork for the consideration of vulnerability due to mental illness as a morally relevant element in sentencing decisions.
引用
收藏
页码:147 / 229
页数:83
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