Why do people support tough sentencing of criminal offenders? Three explanations dominate the literature. The first is an instrumental perspective: people are concerned about becoming a victim of crime and they look to punishment to reduce future harm. The second is a relational perspective: people are concerned about community breakdown, and they support punishment to restore moral boundaries. The third is a psychological model based on ideological preferences: people desire conformity and authority in society, and they look to institutions to punish transgressions that threaten collective security. Building on the work of Tyler & Boeckmann (1997), two studies of London citizens (n1=13,929, n2=283) suggest a way of integrating these three ...
‘Punitiveness’ has been the focus of increasing criminological attention in recent decades. This stu...
This paper argues that the “Economics of Crime” concentrates too much on punishment as a policy to f...
Findings concerning people’s attitudes toward crime and punishment are often at odds, perhaps influe...
Why do people support tough sentencing of criminal offenders? Three explanations dominate the litera...
Public attitudes towards law-breakers shape the tone and tenor of crime-control policy, and the desi...
The argument advanced in this paper is that the motivation to punish relies on punishment producing ...
This paper examines the influence of so-called popular punitivism on contemporary society. Concerted...
textThis dissertation explores public attitudes towards criminal punishment in Western societies and...
This article advances a holistic conceptualization of punitiveness that acknowledges its complexity ...
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to explore individual factors predicting support for harsher ...
From the mid-twentieth century, state and public conceptions of deviance and crime control have turn...
 The paper presents a study demonstrating that social and political trust are good predictors o...
Incarceration remains the foremost form of sentence for serious crimes in Western democracies. At th...
The article argues for a conception of the justification of punishment that is compatible with a mod...
The purpose of this paper was to contribute to an increased knowledge of the punitive attitudes of S...
‘Punitiveness’ has been the focus of increasing criminological attention in recent decades. This stu...
This paper argues that the “Economics of Crime” concentrates too much on punishment as a policy to f...
Findings concerning people’s attitudes toward crime and punishment are often at odds, perhaps influe...
Why do people support tough sentencing of criminal offenders? Three explanations dominate the litera...
Public attitudes towards law-breakers shape the tone and tenor of crime-control policy, and the desi...
The argument advanced in this paper is that the motivation to punish relies on punishment producing ...
This paper examines the influence of so-called popular punitivism on contemporary society. Concerted...
textThis dissertation explores public attitudes towards criminal punishment in Western societies and...
This article advances a holistic conceptualization of punitiveness that acknowledges its complexity ...
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to explore individual factors predicting support for harsher ...
From the mid-twentieth century, state and public conceptions of deviance and crime control have turn...
 The paper presents a study demonstrating that social and political trust are good predictors o...
Incarceration remains the foremost form of sentence for serious crimes in Western democracies. At th...
The article argues for a conception of the justification of punishment that is compatible with a mod...
The purpose of this paper was to contribute to an increased knowledge of the punitive attitudes of S...
‘Punitiveness’ has been the focus of increasing criminological attention in recent decades. This stu...
This paper argues that the “Economics of Crime” concentrates too much on punishment as a policy to f...
Findings concerning people’s attitudes toward crime and punishment are often at odds, perhaps influe...