Spaces of Care 2020
DOI: 10.5040/9781509929665.ch-002
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Punishment and Care Reappraised

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Cited by 16 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…For example, compulsory ‘welfare’ interventions, especially when enforced by threat of recall, can be hard to distinguish from punishment. Again, the relationship between care and control is much more complex than a mere antonymic opposition (Canton and Dominey 2020). Second, this type of binary analysis lends itself to the beguiling but misleading metaphor of a pendulum, supposing that practice represents policy in an unproblematic way, one orientation dominant while the other is suppressed until the pendulum swings back.…”
Section: Rationales For Post-custodial Involvementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, compulsory ‘welfare’ interventions, especially when enforced by threat of recall, can be hard to distinguish from punishment. Again, the relationship between care and control is much more complex than a mere antonymic opposition (Canton and Dominey 2020). Second, this type of binary analysis lends itself to the beguiling but misleading metaphor of a pendulum, supposing that practice represents policy in an unproblematic way, one orientation dominant while the other is suppressed until the pendulum swings back.…”
Section: Rationales For Post-custodial Involvementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the responsibilities of probation practitioners also include public protection and the enforcement of court orders. While the notion that care and control are necessarily in opposition is unhelpful (Canton and Dominey, 2020), the idea the probation service should care for offenders sits uncomfortably with political rhetoric that has a focus on punishment, a reluctance to attribute crime to problems in society, and a desire to be on the side of the (ideal) victim.…”
Section: Care Ethics and The Work Of Probationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Probation workers have been aware of the moral significance of their work from the earliest days. In recent years, these aspects have often been explored in terms of probation values , considering the moral worth, the politics and the practical feasibility of finding ways of giving expression to probation's ethical commitments (Canton and Dominey, 2017: Chapter 3; Cowburn et al, 2013; Gelsthorpe, 2007; Nellis and Gelsthorpe, 2004; Williams, 1994). Sometimes, in the contested political arena, it can seem as if these concerns have been pushed aside in the relentless pursuit of the enquiry to find out ‘what works’.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Legal initiatives, pre‐sentence reports on family circumstances (Flynn et al, 2015), and the inclusion of childcare responsibilities as a consideration within sentencing guidelines have been suggested but no such measures exist in NSW or Victoria (Trotter et al, 2015). More broadly, a “proliferation of sentencing purposes to which courts must have regard” have generated political opposition and inconsistencies in sentencing (Canton, 2020, sec. Punishment and the ethics of care).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At first glance, the ethics of care seem to be at odds with the objectives of the justice system: deterrence, punishment, rehabilitation, protection of the public and reparations. However, Canton (2020) has argued that, through frameworks of desistance, restorative justice, censure and reconciliation, an ethics of care is compatible with all but one of these objectives. Only deterrence remains at odds with care, since it issues a threat to potential offenders rather than an appeal to their membership of a common moral community.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%