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13 Berkeley J. Crim. L. 31 (2008)
All for One: A Review of Victim-Centric Justifications for Criminal Punishment

handle is hein.journals/bjcl13 and id is 33 raw text is: MACLEOD

All for One: A Review of Victim-Centric
Justifications for Criminal Punishment
Adam J. MacLeodt
INTRODUCTION
Disparate understandings of the primary justification for criminal
punishment have in recent years divided along new lines. Retributivists and
consequentialists have long debated whether a community ought to punish
violators of legal norms primarily because the violator has usurped communal
standards (the retributivist view), or rather merely as a means toward some end
such as rehabilitation or deterrence (the consequentialist view). The competing
answers to this question have demarcated for some time the primary boundary
in criminal jurisprudential thought.
A new fault line appears to have opened between those who maintain the
historical view that criminal punishment promotes the common good and those
who believe that criminal punishment should primarily or exclusively serve or
vindicate the interests of individual victims. For lack of commonly-used labels,
this article shall refer to the former as Blackstonian retributivists and the
latter as victim-centrists.  Victim-centrists would  allow  states and
communities to punish those who usurp certain rights of particular victims and
would, in some instances, excuse conduct that has historically been understood
as criminal on the ground that such conduct best serves a victim's interest.
Victim-centric justifications for punishment or forbearance   from
punishment can naturally be understood from a consequentialist perspective.
Consequentialist reasoning provides a link between the harm suffered by a
particular victim  and the culpability of the perpetrator.  For this reason
consequentialism and victim-centrism make an obvious fit. However, the
divide between the Blackstonians and the victim-centrists is not contiguous
with the line between retributivists and consequentialists.  Rather, some
retributivists, most notably George Fletcher,' have pitched their tents with
T  Associate Professor, Jones School of Law, Faullner University. The author, who alone
generated the errors contained in this article, is nevertheless indebted to Gerard Bradley for his
insightful comments.
1. See generally George P. Fletcher, The Place of Victims in the Theory of Retribution. 3

10/1/2008 12:56-58 PM

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