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Campus: Kensington Campus
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Career: Postgraduate
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Units of Credit: 6
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Indicative Contact Hours per Week: 2
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Enrolment Requirements:
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Prerequisite: Academic Program must be either 9200, 9210, 9230, 5740, 9285,5285
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Description
This course provides a theoretical and policy-oriented consideration of how and why we punish criminal offending, particularly through the use of imprisonment. The course has an inter-disciplinary approach to penology which draws on law, history, sociology, and criminology.
LLM Specialisation
Recommended Prior Knowledge
None.
Course Objectives
- To explore punishment and penalty in modern society
- To provide an understanding of the relationship between race, gender and class and the administration of the punishment
- To consider the relationship between punishment and social structure, and the significance of punishment for socio-political order
- To consider the relationship between sentencing and punishment
- To explore various theoretical contributions to the concept of punishment
- To analyse contemporary issues in punishment and the related public policy dilemmas
- To encourage students to develop their skills in inter-disciplinary research
Main Topics
- Contemporary law and public policy issues, including juvenile detention, women in prison, the imprisonment of ethnic and racial minorities, inequality and imprisonment, privatisation, the use of torture, deaths in custody, the death penalty, and the impact of law and order policies on punishment
- Consideration of various theoretical contributions to our understanding of punishment including the work of Durkheim, Foucault, Weber, Marxist approaches, and contemporary writers like David Garland and John Pratt
Assessment
Class participation |
Preparation and engagement in class |
20% |
Research essay |
6,000 - 7,000 words |
80% |
Course Texts
Prescribed Garland, D. (1990) Punishment and Modern Society, Oxford University Press
Resources
Refer to Course Outline provided by lecturer at the beginning of session.
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