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CJC2020

Punishment, Power and Justice ( 6 points, SCA Band 1, 0.125 EFTSL)

Undergraduate
(ARTS)

Leader: Dr Jude McCulloch

Offered:
Not offered in 2005.

Synopsis: Students read, analyse and discuss the nature and history of punishment. Issues, including the relationship between punishment and social control and the differential impact of punishment on diverse communities are explored. Contemporary and comparative issues examined include the impact of new technologies, neo-liberalism, and globalisation on levels and modes of punishment. Different modes and models of punishment are explored including private, tribal or vigilante punishments, secular and religious systems of punishment, the 'spectacular' punishments of the gallows, corporal and capital punishment, prisons, home detention, community corrections and administrative detention.

Objectives: 1. A critical awareness of the history of punishment in Australia, and internationally and contemporary trends in punishment. 2. An understanding of the various theories and types of punishment and the role of punishment in society. 3. The skills to critically analyse debates about the role and nature of punishment in society throughout history and in contemporary times. 4. An ability to present a fluid and logical argument about the role of punishment in society. 5. The ability to formulate ideas, based on evidence and theory, about the role and nature of punishment in different societies, countries and over time. 6. An understanding of the factors influencing the different models and forms of punishment.

Assessment: Tutorial contribution: 10%, Examination 2000 words: 50%, Essay 2500 words: 40%.

Contact Hours: 1 one hour lecture and a one hour tutorial per week

Prerequisites: CJC1001,CJC1002 These subjects are prerequisites only if students wish to undertake a Criminal Justice and Criminology major. The subject can be taken as an elective without prerequisites.

Prohibitions: CJC3030