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Policing and Punishment for Profit

Chris W. Surprenant ()
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Chris W. Surprenant: University of New Orleans

Journal of Business Ethics, 2019, vol. 159, issue 1, No 8, 119-131

Abstract: Abstract This paper examines ethical considerations relating to the current role of financial incentives in policing and punishment in the USA, focusing on the two methods of punishment most popular in the USA: (1) fines and forfeitures and (2) incarceration. It examines how financial incentives motivate much of our penal system, including how and when laws are enforced; discusses relevant ethical considerations and concerns connected with our current practices; proposes a theoretical solution for addressing these problems that involves realigning existing incentives to better serve the interests of justice; and considers how that theoretical solution can be applied in practice. While there are no easy solutions to resolving many of the current ethical problems related to policing and punishment, this paper will argue that some of our current practices, practices that many people believe are morally problematic (e.g., our current approach to prison labor), not only are not problematic, but also can point us toward more effective and efficient policy solutions in other areas.

Keywords: Policing and punishment; Fines and forfeitures; Criminal justice reform (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
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DOI: 10.1007/s10551-017-3744-7

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