EPISODE · Jan 16, 2025 · 29 MIN
Prisons and Proportional Punishment
from UCL Uncovering Politics · host Helen Brown-Coverdale, Emily McTernan
Getting convicted of a crime can have lots of further, harmful consequences, perhaps you’ll lose your home or job. Yet those consequences don’t fall equally: some might go back to something like their previous lives after imprisonment, where others can’t. And often that has to do with wider social injustices. So, is that unfair? Ought the state make punishment more proportionate? Today’s guest is Dr Helen Brown Coverdale, Lecturer in Political Theory at UCL Political Science. Helen's research explores these issues, arguing that we should reform punishment to mitigate some of these harms. Mentioned in this episode:Helen Brown Coverdale (2024) Putting Proportional Punishment into Perspective. Criminal Law and Philosophy.
What this episode covers
This week we’re talking about punishment and individual circumstances: could it be fair if two people, convicted of the same crime, get different sentences?
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Prisons and Proportional Punishment
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