Introduction
1. Thinking about Justice
An Evaluative Concept
Identifying Rights
A Question of Motivation2. Thinking about Criminal Justice
The Lex Talionis Framework of Negative Reciprocity
The Possibility of Dispensing Entirely with Negative Reciprocity
Negative Reciprocity Once Again: Impartial Administration of Punishment for Malicious Violations of the Fair Terms of Cooperation
Criminal Justice: The State as a Permanent Enforcement Agency
3. Redressing Grievances: The Retaliation Model
The Pure Retaliation Model
Moving away from the Pure Retaliation Model: The Medieval State as a Weak Enforcement Agency
4. Redressing Grievances: The Criminal Justice Model
Moving towards the Criminal Justice Model: The Rise of the Modern State
The Possibility of Taming State Power
Taming the Power of the State
5. Decriminalization
The Eligibility Principle and Decriminalization
The Eligibility Principle's Ramifications
6. Policing the Police
Stop and Frisk
Systematic Surveillance of Behavior in Public Places
7. State-Imposed Punishment
Whether, What Kind, and How Much Questions Bearing on Punishment
Prison Conditions: The State's Carceral Responsibility for Inmates
8. Equality: Racial and Class Disparities in the Context of State-Imposed Punishment
Retail vs. Wholesale Approaches to Criminal Justice
The Possibility of Achieving Equal Justice on a Case by Case Basis
Afterword
Les informations fournies dans la section « Synopsis » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.