The Enlightenment and early traditions - Classicism and positivism Flashcards
Book: Criminology. A sociological introduction
Classicism
Eighteenth century, aimed to introduce a much more rational and fair system for organising punishments and control. Its concern was to establish social order.
Cesare Beccaria
Seen as the founder of classicism. Wanted to see the reform of the irrationality and unfairness of the judicial system (including the abolition of torture and punishment).
Social contract theory
Classicism. How individuals come together to make a society work.
What does it mean that humans have “free will”
classicism. Human actions are not simply determined by inside or outside forces, but can be seen as matters of free decisions.
Punishment as a deterrent
Classicism. Human beings will choose not to commit the crime if the punishment fits the crime.
Utilitarianism
Classicism. Laws useful to the greatest number.
Secularism
Classicism. Avoids the ideas of God’s law, instead law was made by human beings, and rational.
Punishment in classicism
Must be proportional to the crime, meaning that it corresponds to the severity of the harm done by the crime and it resembles the crime.
Essay on crimes and punishments
Cesare Baccaria in 1764; advocated for the humane treatment of criminals.
The panopticon
Jeremy Bentham. A circular prison with cells arranged around a central well, from which prisoners could at all times be observed.
Problems with the classical model
Overly rational vision of human nature, committing crime is a free choice and it assumes that societies work in fair and just ways.
Cesare Lombroso
Seen as the founder of modern criminology. believed that criminals were earlier species of the evolutionary scale. Invented the idea of a criminal body.
The Italian school
Raffaele Garolafo, Enrico Ferri and cesare Lombroso.
Enrico Ferri
Believed the the causes of crime fell into three main heads: the anthropological, physical and social.
The five basic criminals by Ferri
criminal lunatics, the born incorrigibles, habitual criminals, occasional criminals and emotional criminals.