Dictionary Definition
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Synonyms
Translations
the act of punishment
- Finnish: rankaiseminen, rangaistus
- Hungarian: büntetés
- Japanese: 罰
- Latvian: sods, sodīšana
- Russian: наказание, кара
- Slovene: kazen
- Swedish: straff
penalty for wrongdoing
- Czech: trest
- Finnish: rangaistus
- Hungarian: büntetés
- Japanese: 罰, 刑罰, 処罰
- Latvian: sods
- Russian: наказание
- Swedish: straff
- ttbc Arabic: (ʕiqāb) , (ʕuqūba)
- ttbc Bulgarian: наказание (nakazánie) (1)
- ttbc Dutch: straf
- ttbc French: punition
- ttbc German: Strafe
- ttbc Hebrew: ענישה
- ttbc Italian: punizione
- ttbc Korean: 벌 (beol)
- ttbc Kurdish: ceza , siza
- ttbc Latin: punitio , punitionis gen.
- ttbc Old English: wīte
- ttbc Persian: (tanbih)
- ttbc Portuguese: punição
- ttbc Romanian: pedeapsă
- ttbc Spanish: castigo , penitencia
- ttbc Telugu: శిక్ష (Siksha), దండన (daMDana)
Extensive Definition
Punishment is the practice of imposing something
unpleasant or aversive on a person or animal in response to an
unwanted, disobedient or morally wrong behavior.
Etymology
The word is the abstract substantivation of the verb to punish, which is recorded in English since 1340, deriving from Old French puniss-, an extended form of the stem of punir "to punish," from Latin punire "inflict a penalty on, cause pain for some offense," earlier poenire, from poena "penalty, punishment".Colloquial use of to punish for "to inflict heavy
damage or loss" is first recorded in 1801, originally in boxing;
for punishing as "hard-hitting" is from 1811.
Definitions
In common usage, the word "punishment" might be described as "an authorized imposition of deprivations — of freedom or privacy or other goods to which the person otherwise has a right, or the imposition of special burdens — because the person has been found guilty of some criminal violation, typically (though not invariably) involving harm to the innocent." (according to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy).The most common applications are in legal and
similarly 'regulated' contexts, being the infliction of some kind
of pain or loss upon a person for a misdeed, i.e. for transgressing
a law or command (including prohibitions) given by some authority
(such as an educator, employer or supervisor, public or private
official).
In psychology
In the field of psychology punishment has a more restrictive and technical definition. In this field, punishment is the reduction of a behavior via a stimulus which is applied ("positive punishment") or removed ("negative punishment"). Making an offending student lose recess or play privileges are examples of negative punishment, while extra chores or spanking are examples of positive punishment. The definition requires that punishment is only determined after the fact by the reduction in behavior; if the offending behavior of the subject does not decrease then it is not considered punishment. There is some conflation of punishment and aversives, though an aversive that does not decrease behavior is not considered punishment.Scope of application
Punishments are applied for various purposes,
most generally, to encourage and enforce proper behavior as defined
by society or family. Criminals are
punished judicially, by fines, corporal
punishment or custodial
sentences such as prison; detainees risk further
punishments for breaches of internal rules. Children, pupils
and other trainees may be punished by their educators or
instructors (mainly parents, guardians,
or teachers, tutors and
coaches).
Slaves, domestic and other servants used to be
punishable by their masters. Employees can still be subject to a
contractual form of fine or demotion. Most hierarchical
organizations, such as military and police forces, or even
churches, still apply quite rigid internal discipline, even with a
judicial system of their own (court martial, canonical
courts).
Punishment may also be applied on moral,
especially religious, grounds, as in penance (which is voluntary) or
imposed in a theocracy with a religious police (as in a strict
Islamic state like Iran or under the Taliban) or (though
not a true theocracy) by Inquisition.
History and rationale
The progress of civilization has resulted in a vast change alike in the theory and in the method of punishment. In primitive society punishment was left to the individuals wronged or their families, and was vindictive or retributive: in quantity and quality it would bear no special relation to the character or gravity of the offence.Gradually there would arise the idea of
proportionate punishment, of which the characteristic type is
an
eye for an eye. The second stage was punishment by individuals
under the control of the state, or community; in the third stage,
with the growth of law, the state took over the primitive function
and provided itself with the machinery of justice for the
maintenance of public order. Henceforward crimes are against the
state, and the exaction of punishment by the wronged individual is
illegal (compare Lynch Law).
Even at this stage the vindictive or retributive character of
punishment remains, but gradually, and specially after the humanist
movement under thinkers like
Beccaria and Jeremy
Bentham, new theories begin to emerge. Two chief trains of
thought have combined in the condemnation of primitive theory and
practice. On the one hand the retributive principle itself has been
very largely superseded by the protective and the reformative; on
the other punishments involving bodily pain have become
objectionable to the general sense of society. Consequently
corporal and even capital punishment occupy a far less prominent
position, and tend everywhere to disappear. It began to be
recognized also that stereotyped punishments, such as belong to
penal codes, fail to take due account of the particular condition
of an offence and the character and circumstances of the offender.
A fixed fine, for example, operates very unequally on rich and
poor.
Modern theories date from the 18th century, when
the humanitarian movement began to teach the dignity of the
individual and to emphasize his rationality and responsibility. The
result was the reduction of punishment both in quantity and in
severity, the improvement of the prison system, and the first
attempts to study the psychology of crime and to distinguish
between classes of criminals with a view to their improvement (see
criminology,
crime, juvenile
delinquency).
These latter problems are the province of
criminal anthropology and criminal sociology, sciences so called
because they view crime as the outcome of anthropological viz.
social conditions. The law breaker is himself a product of social
evolution and cannot be regarded as solely responsible for his
disposition to transgress. Habitual crime is thus to be treated as
a disease. Punishment can, therefore, be justified only insofar as
it either protects society by removing temporarily or permanently
one who has injured it, or acting as a deterrent, or aims at the
moral regeneration of the criminal. Thus the retributive theory of
punishment with its criterion of justice as an end in itself gives
place to a theory which regards punishment solely as a means to an
end, utilitarian or moral, according as the common advantage or the
good of the criminal is sought.
Michel
Foucault describes in detail the evolution of punishment from
hanging, drawing and quartering of medieval times to the modern
systems of fines and
prisons. He sees a trend
in criminal punishment from vengeance by the King to a
more practical, utilitarian concern for deterrence
and rehabilitation. A
particularly harsh punishment is sometimes said to be draconian,
after Draco,
the lawgiver of the classical polis of Athens. But as the adjective
Spartan still testifies, its wholly militarized rival Sparta was
the harshest a state of law can be on its own citizens, e.g.
crypteia (including
flogging for being caught when stealing as ordered). In operant
conditioning, punishment is the presentation of a stimulus
contingent on a response which results in a decrease in response
strength (as evidenced by a decrease in the frequency of response).
The effectiveness of punishment in suppressing the response depends
on many factors, including the intensity of the stimulus and the
consistency with which the stimulus is presented when the response
occurs. In parenting, additional factors that increase the
effectiveness of punishment include a verbal explanation of the
reason for the punishment and a good relationship between the
parent and the child.
Types of punishments
Punishment can be divided into Positive punishment (the application of an aversive stimulus, such as pain) and Negative punishment (the removal or denial of a desired object, condition, or aversive stimulus).Criminal punishment
- Socio-economical punishments:
-
- fines or loss of income
- confiscation
- demotion, suspension or expulsion (especially in a strict hierarchy, such as military or clergy)
- restriction or loss of civic and other rights retribution is
- community service
- Custodial sentences include imprisonment and other forms of forced detention (e.g., involuntary institutional psychiatry) and hard labor are in fact also physical punishments, even if no actual beatings are in force internally; note that behavioral psychologists do not consider prison a sound punishment because most criminals are repeat offenders, thus, their behavior has not changed. If the behavior does not change then any stimulus that was presented is not punishment just aversive.
- Public humiliation often combines social elements with corporal punishment, and indeed often punishments from two or more categories are combined (especially when these are meant reinforce each-other's effect) as in the logic of penal harm. In the past, people in some parts of the Western world were punished by being put in the stocks, or by being ducked in water.
- Corporal punishment. Legality of these types of punishment varies from country to country. However it can be defined more widely:
-
- Whipping or caning with various implements and on various body parts
- Marking via branding or mutilations such as amputation of a finger or arm.
- Capital punishment, also known as the death penalty, the most extreme form of punishment, sometimes used in countries where beating is seen as inhumane. See use of death penalty worldwide. Methods of capital punishment include crucifixion, hanging, the firing squad, burning at the stake, lethal injection, gas chambers, beheading "by guillotine or axe", and starvation, among others.
For children
Examples of punishments imposed by educators (parents, guardians or teachers etc.; traditions differ greatly in time, place and cultural sphere; some are considered illegal abuse in certain countries) include:- Corporal
punishment:
- Mainly spanking in various modes (banned in some countries, in others even prescribed by law);
- Washing out mouth with soap
- Mild forms of custodial punishments:
- Temporary (or permanent) removal of privileges, rights, or choices, such as lack of desserts or toys
- Compulsory activity such as extra chores
Non-corporal forms of punishments for children
have come under criticism in recent times. Arguments against
non-violent modification of behavior include the issue of ethics, and whether one's will
should be forced on children.
Positive parenting and Taking
Children Seriously are non-punitive alternatives to modifying
behavior.
Other
Many religious organizations apply semi-voluntary accepted punishments such as penance.Possible reasons for punishment
seealso Criminal justice There are many possible reasons that might be given to justify or explain why someone ought to be punished; here follows a broad outline of typical, possibly contradictory justifications.Rehabilitation
Some punishment includes work to reform and rehabilitate the wrongdoer so that they will not commit the offense again. This is distinguished from deterrence, in that the goal here is to change the offender's attitude to what they have done, and make them come to see that their behavior was wrong.Incapacitation
Incapacitation is a justification of punishment that refers to when the offender’s ability to commit further offences is removed. This is a forward-looking justification of punishment that views the future reductions in re-offending as sufficient justification for the punishment. This can occur in one of two ways; the offender’s ability to commit crime can be physically removed, or the offender can be geographically removed.The offender’s ability to commit crime can be
physically removed in several ways. This can include cutting the
hands off a thief, as well as other crude punishments. The
castration of offenders is another punishment that can be justified
by incapacitation, furthered by recent media coverage in Britain of
the proposed chemical castration of sexual offenders.
Incapacitation, in this sense, can include any number of
punishments including taking away the driving license off a
dangerous driver but can also include capital punishment.
Despite this, incapacitation is predominately
thought of as incarceration. Imprisonment has the effect of
confining prisoners, physically preventing them from committing
crimes against those outside, i.e. protecting the community. Before
the widespread use of imprisonment, banishment was used as a form
of incapacitation. Nowadays courts have a flexible array of
sentence options available to them that can restrict offender’s
movements, and subsequently their ability to commit crime. Football
hooligans can, for example, be required to attend centres during
football matches.
Selective incapacitation is a modified form of
incapacitation that rationalises the practice of giving only
dangerous and persistent offenders long, and in some case
indefinite, prison sentences. The approach adopts a utilitarian
viewpoint that regards the protection, and subsequent happiness, of
the majority as justification of giving excessive and indefinite
prison sentences. There is, however, strong moral opposition to
this concept.
Deterrence / Prevention
To act as a measure of prevention to those who
are contemplating criminal activity.
Restoration
For minor offences, punishment may take the form of the offender "righting the wrong"; for example, a vandal might be made to clean up the mess he has made. In more serious cases, punishment in the form of fines and compensation payments may also be considered a sort of "restoration".Some libertarians argue that
full restoration or restitution on an individualistic basis is
all that is ever just, and
that this is compatible with both retributivism and a utilitarian degree of
deterrence.http://www.la-articles.org.uk/libertarian_restitution.htm
Retribution
Retribution is the practice of "getting even" with a wrongdoer — the suffering of the wrongdoer is seen as good in itself, even if it has no other benefits. One reason for societies to include this judicial element is to diminish the perceived need for street justice, blood revenge and vigilantism. However, some argue that this is a "zero sum game", that such acts of street justice and blood revenge are not removed from society, but responsibility for carrying them out is merely transferred to the state.Retribution sets an important standard on
punishment — the transgressor must get what he deserves,
but no more. Therefore, a thief put to death is not retribution; a
murderer put to death is. Adam Smith,
who is credited as the father of Capitalism, wrote extensively
about punishment. In his view, an important reason for punishment
is not only deterrence, but also satisfying the resentment of the
victim. Moreover, in the case of the death penalty, the retribution
goes to the dead victim, not his family. (So, to extend Smith's
views, a murderer can be spared the death penalty only by the
victim's express wish, made when he was alive.) One great
difficulty of this approach is that of judging exactly what it is
that the transgressor "deserves". For instance, it may be
retribution to put a thief to death if he steals a family's only
means of livelihood; conversely,
mitigating circumstances may lead to the conclusion that the
execution of a murderer is not retribution. A specific way to
elaborate this concept in the very punishment is the mirror
punishment (the more literal applications of "an eye for an
eye"), a penal form of 'poetic justice' which reflects the nature
or means of the crime in the means of (mainly corporal)
punishment.
Education
From German Criminal Law, Punishment can be explained by positive prevention theory to use criminal justice system to teach people what are the social norms for what is correct and acts as a reinforcement. It teaches people to obey the law and eliminates the free-rider principle of people not obeying the law getting away with it.References
punishment in Catalan: Pena
punishment in Czech: Trest
punishment in Danish: Straf
punishment in German: Strafe
punishment in Spanish: Pena
punishment in French: Châtiment
punishment in Korean: 형벌
punishment in Italian: Pena
punishment in Hebrew: ענישה
punishment in Lithuanian: Bausmė
punishment in Malayalam: ശിക്ഷ
punishment in Dutch: Straf
punishment in Japanese: 刑罰
punishment in Norwegian: Straff
punishment in Polish: Kara (prawo)
punishment in Portuguese: Punição
punishment in Quechua: Wanachay
punishment in Russian: Наказание
punishment in Simple English: Punishment
punishment in Slovak: Trest
punishment in Serbian: Казна
punishment in Swedish: Straff
punishment in Turkish: Ceza (hukuk)
punishment in Walloon: Penitince
punishment in Chinese: 惩罚
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abuse,
admonishment,
admonition, amercement, avengement, banishment, battering, beating, caning, cashiering, castigating, castigation, chastening, chastisement, chastising, comeuppance, compensation, correction, criticism, damage, desert, deserts, discipline, disciplining,
dressing-down, electrocution, excommunication,
execution, exile, fine, flogging, hanging, harm, imprisonment, incarceration, injury, just deserts, lashing, maltreatment, mauling, mulct, paddling, penal retribution,
penalization,
penalty, penance, price, punition, quittance, rebuke, recompense, reprisal, reproof, requital, retribution, revenge, reward, rod, scolding, scourging, sentence, sentencing, spanking, thrashing, torture, trouncing, what for, what is
due, what is merited, whipping