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Retribution

Abstract This chapter explores America’s immediate reaction to the attack on Pearl Harbor, describing how it unified the country and eliminated isolationist views almost overnight. It highlights the American desire for revenge, with many servicemen eager for retribution, particularly in the Pacific, where efforts to defend Wake Island ...
Noe Martinez, Sarah Higinbotham
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Retribution:

2022
This chapter focuses on the aftermath of the Western Rising. It tells the grim story of what happened to the defeated insurgents after the protests had been crushed, as Lord Russell and his subordinates identified the chief leaders of the rising and sent them up to London for interrogation by the king's Privy Council in preparation for their eventual ...
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Retribution as Revenge and Retribution as Just Deserts

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2012
Public attitudes towards law-breakers shape the tone and tenor of crime-control policy. The desire for retribution seems to be the main motivation underpinning punitive attitudes towards sentencing, yet there is some confusion in the research literature over what retribution really means.
Monica M. Gerber, Jonathan Jackson
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The restoration of retribution

Analysis, 1972
AbstractThis chapter shows how Hart's account of restorative justice in relation to torts, in The Concept of Law, suggests an account of retributive justice in relation to crimes. Such an account is partially developed by Jeffrie Murphy, but needs the completion that is afforded when what the offender gains in the act of offending is correctly ...
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Retributive Justice

2016
In this contribution, we review research on the psychology of retributive justice, the subjectively appropriate punishment of individuals or groups who have committed a transgression. We discuss possible evolutionary origins of retributive justice, move on to more reflective philosophies of punishment prevalent in societal discourse, and discuss ...
Wenzel, Michael, Okimoto, Tyler G.
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The retributive paradox

Analysis, 1994
[1] S. L. Hurley, 'Newcomb's Problem, Prisoners' Dilemma, and Collective Action', Synthese 86 (1991) 173-96. [2] David Lewis, 'Prisoners' Dilemma is a Newcomb Problem', Philosophy and Public Affairs 8 (1979) 235-40; reprinted in Paradoxes of Rationality and Cooperation, edited by Richmond Campbell and Lanning Sowden (Vancouver: University of British ...
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Causality and retribution

Erkenntnis, 1939
If we are to accept the results of modern physics and the significance ascribed to them by eminent exponents of this most exact of all natural sciences, we are in the midst of an important transformation of our conception of the universe. The notion that the law of causality absolutely determines all events has been shaken, and if this law is not to be
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On Retribution

Philosophy, 1956
A retributive theory of punishment must at least say that it is a necessary condition for the justification of a punishment that the person punished should be guilty. But “guilty” here may be taken in two different senses, giving two very different kinds of justification.
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Validating a Set of Retribution Narratives for Use in Media Psychology Research

Communication Studies, 2021
Matthew Grizzard   +2 more
exaly  

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