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Book Chapter

'Responsive Penal Censure' and its Implications

Details

Citation

Duff RA (2025) 'Responsive Penal Censure' and its Implications. In: Manikis M & Watson G (eds.) Sentencing, Public Opinion, and Criminal Justice: Essays in Honour of Julian V Roberts. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 23-36. https://doi.org/10.1093/9780191991936.003.0004

Abstract
This chapter discusses a key dimension of Julian V Roberts¡¯ conception of ¡®penal censure¡¯. In a number of articles, he and his co-authors have argued that while one should indeed, as some penal theorists suggest, understand criminal punishment as a species of censure (and should understand censure in retributive terms), that censure should be ¡®responsive¡¯ and ¡®dynamic¡¯ rather than ¡®static¡¯: that is, its form and severity should be modulated by the offender¡¯s own response to their crime and to their punishment. Section 2 sketches this argument and shows why it is important and illuminating. However, Section 3 suggests that one should not draw from this insight the practical implications for sentencing and for the administration of sentences that Roberts seeks to draw: in particular, one should not treat the offender¡¯s ¡®post-sentence conduct¡¯, their remorseful and constructive response to their punishment, as a retributive reason to mitigate it. Such conduct would give reason to mitigate the offender¡¯s punishment only if the original sentence was based on the assumption that the offender would remain unrepentant; but that is not something that we, or the sentencer, should assume.

Keywords
Julian V Roberts; penal censure; retributivism; static vs responsive censure; post-sentence conduct; remorse; mitigation

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2025
Publication date online31/01/2025
URL
PublisherOxford University Press
Place of publicationOxford
ISBN9780198883869
eISBN9780191991936

People (1)

Professor Antony Duff

Professor Antony Duff

Emeritus Professor, Philosophy