So-called shaming penalties have received a fair amount of attention in the popular press and, thanks primarily to the work of Dan Kahan and Toni Massaro, in the legal literature as well. Unfortunately, the current debate focuses on shame as the main way to understand what these penalties are all about. I argue that at least some of these so-called shaming penalties are better understood as educative penalties. I develop this educating model and contrast it with the shaming model. I also suggest that penalties fitting the educating model have more normative appeal than those fitting the shaming model
If we want to provide a justification for legal punishment, then, we must answer two distinct questi...
When the state punishes a person, it treats him as it ordinarily should not. It takes away his prope...
This paper answers the question—can citizens be shamed in a manner that is morally justifiable—by fo...
So-called shaming penalties have received a fair amount of attention in the popular press and, tha...
(Excerpt) While there has been an extensive amount of scholarly discourse regarding the propriety of...
Debates over shaming punishments have raged over the past few years, with people like Dan Kahan and ...
In this article, I renounce my previous defense of shaming penalties. Sort of. In What Do Alternativ...
Misbehaving students at Washington Middle School last month couldn’t expect their bad behavior to go...
The emotions of shame and guilt have recently appeared in debates concerning legal punishment, in pa...
This comment begins by discussing the historical development of the juvenile justice system and soci...
How would punishment work in an ideal community, one in which the members of the community identify ...
Although punishment has been a crucial feature of every legal system, widespread disagreement exists...
Public concern over bullying has reached an all-time high. The absence of a sensible criminal chargi...
As American judges move steadily towards greater humiliation and stigma as punishments for convicted...
We are all aware that there was a time in the western world when punishment frequently revolved arou...
If we want to provide a justification for legal punishment, then, we must answer two distinct questi...
When the state punishes a person, it treats him as it ordinarily should not. It takes away his prope...
This paper answers the question—can citizens be shamed in a manner that is morally justifiable—by fo...
So-called shaming penalties have received a fair amount of attention in the popular press and, tha...
(Excerpt) While there has been an extensive amount of scholarly discourse regarding the propriety of...
Debates over shaming punishments have raged over the past few years, with people like Dan Kahan and ...
In this article, I renounce my previous defense of shaming penalties. Sort of. In What Do Alternativ...
Misbehaving students at Washington Middle School last month couldn’t expect their bad behavior to go...
The emotions of shame and guilt have recently appeared in debates concerning legal punishment, in pa...
This comment begins by discussing the historical development of the juvenile justice system and soci...
How would punishment work in an ideal community, one in which the members of the community identify ...
Although punishment has been a crucial feature of every legal system, widespread disagreement exists...
Public concern over bullying has reached an all-time high. The absence of a sensible criminal chargi...
As American judges move steadily towards greater humiliation and stigma as punishments for convicted...
We are all aware that there was a time in the western world when punishment frequently revolved arou...
If we want to provide a justification for legal punishment, then, we must answer two distinct questi...
When the state punishes a person, it treats him as it ordinarily should not. It takes away his prope...
This paper answers the question—can citizens be shamed in a manner that is morally justifiable—by fo...