Difference between revisions of "DEC 2"

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==24: DEC 2==
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==26: DEC 2==
  
===Assigned Reading===
+
===Assigned===
  
:*Kessler, Chapters 27-32, p.(137-165) (28)
+
:*Cavadino, Michael and James Dignan. "Penal policy and political economy". (17)
  
===2nd Thoughts on the Satisfactions of Industrial Foods===
+
:*Tax rates by country.[https://www.taxpolicycenter.org/briefing-book/how-do-us-taxes-compare-internationally]
 +
:*Crime rates by country [https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/crime-rate-by-country]
 +
:*Homicide rates by country [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_intentional_homicide_rate]
  
:*Still thinking about some issues in Monday's reading.  Fast foods and industrial foods (IF) often involve sensory overload, high palatability, high glycemic responses, and lots of fats, salt, and sugar.  It seems like it would follow from this that industrial foods are satisfying?  Maybe.  But maybe overstimulation can be under-satisfying.
+
===Cavadino, Michael and James Dignan. "Penal policy and political economy"===
  
:*Some possibilities:
+
:*Huge increase in US incarceration rate since 1970s5x, highest in the world.
::*1. IF is overstimulatingThis produces conditioned over eating. (Kessler's emphasis)
 
::*2. IF is satisfying at the level of mouth taste and multi-sensory engagement, but it puts us out of sync with stomach and gut satisfactions.  (glycemic response, sense of fullness, absence of fiber, etc.) So, IF is ultimately unsatisfying.  Research suggests unsatisfying diets produce cravings.  (Try to put together research on food satisfaction and craving in relation to IF)
 
::*3. Picture from the Reno heart diet.  You can eat too much food and still not be satisfied. Just as you can be overfed and undernurished. Would this be equally true of a traditional cuisine?  Arguably, you can't overeat a healthy diet. (Compare to other behaviors which humans tend to find addictive or objects of obsession. Sex and drugs.)
 
  
===Kessler, Chapters 27-32===
+
:*Two claims:
 +
::*Diffs in penalty likely to continue in spite of globalization
 +
::*One reason for this is that penality tracks political economy.  (Sort of like cons/liberal trait in other areas.)
  
:*Kessler's focus is on overeating, but much of this seems to apply to patterns of unhealthy eating as wellSo as you are thinking about today's research, even if you do not overeat, think about how well this also explains conditioning to industrial foods.
+
:*Starts with an overview of the influence of the US on global penal policyTo the extent that US exerts influence on other countries to move in a neo-liberal direction there may be "penal convergence". Also, incarcertation systems are one of our global exports!  "correctional imperialism"
  
:C27: Overeating becomes more dangerous.
+
:*Some elements of the US "justice model" (retributive punishment and retributive deterrence) travel faster than others. "3 strikes" and "zero tolerance"
  
:*Strong thesis: 137
+
:*In Europe, the European Convention on Human Rights is influential.  Moved Russia away from capital punishment.
  
:*Our brains are designed to focus on salient stimuli.  Salient food drives overeating.  Reinforcement learning.  Role of memory, enhanced by multi-sensory stimuli,  Once conditioning is strong, the desire to feel better can be overcome by the desire to follow the habit.  '''Deep habits don’t trigger thought or reflection.''' (Note, that is a good thing.)
+
:*'''Political Economy and Penality'''
 +
::*441: Table: Typology of political economies and their penal tendencies.
 +
::*Neo-liberal. Example: US
 +
::*Conservative corporatism  Example: Germany in 2008 recession reinvests in industrial modernization and worker skills.
 +
::*Social democratic corporatism (more egalitarian and secular)
 +
::*Oriental corporatism
  
:*Hyperpalatable foods are hyper-stimulants. They are effective in creating conditioned hyper eating.
+
:*Let's review some of the connections the authors make in their discussion. (bring in crime rates)
  
:C28 What Weight-Loss Drugs Can Teach Us
+
:*447: Table: Political economy and imprisonment rates.
  
:*Phen-fen - banned, but apparently effective in blocking obsessive thought about food and drugs. Indicates that they have similar underlying mechanisms.
+
:*Is neo-liberalism "criminogenic"?
 +
::*Possibly: Evidence that unequal societies with weak community relationships suffer from worse rates of crime. 447.  [Note how this might support a public health / social justice model for (instead of) punishment.]
 +
::*Interesting: Weak link bt crime rates and imprisonment rates. 
 +
::*Some possible mechanisms:  Neo-liberal societies have high social exclusion: labor market and CJ failures treated similarly.  The authors suggests a "feedback loop" here: the socially excluded confirm the neo-liberal narrative.
 +
::*By contrast, Corporatist and social dem states are inclusionary, have a communitarian ethos. (Less likely to intervene, less likely to ask citizens, “Are you alright?” Old MRFW news example [https://www.npr.org/2021/03/24/980906085/supreme-court-mulls-whether-police-can-enter-home-without-warrant-to-save-a-life]
  
:*Patient: “I’m there, the food is there, but I don’t feel like eating the food.  It used to be that I would see the food and I would go completely nuts, and that doesn’t happen any longer.
+
:*Beckett and Western (2001) and others claim that high welfare spending correlates with low incarceration (except Japan). Also, economic inequality predicts high incarceration rates.
  
:C29
+
===Some Ways of Thinking about Just Punishment===
  
:*”Conditioned Hypereating”.  Governed by cues, priming, and emotion.
+
:*Traditional/Current Theories of Punishment
  
:*Cues: example of being cued by a fast food place as you return from the gym147:  “elaborated thought”. — brain works on details, connections, plan for getting rewardSets up tension with conscious awareness“If you eat the salient food today, it’s going to be more salient tomorrow because you have more positive associations with it
+
::*'''Retributive punishment''' / retributive deterrenceRequires very strong concept of MR and FW to be justRetribution is justified by "moral desert"It can also involve "social exclusion" -- making it hard for offenders to vote or hold a job.   
  
:*Priming: tendency to seek a food reward more intensely once it has been tasted.  In studies of hunger, test subjects report higher levels of hunger during the first part of the meal.  149. Research supporting priming effect.  Test subjects consumed more of the food they were primed by.   
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::*'''Utilitarian models''' of punishment: General principle: Reducing harm to public and offender.   
  
:*Emotions: some emotions drive overeating by reinforcing cues and primingSadness and Anger In a brain imaging study (151), test subjects in whom a negative mood had been induced were more stimulated by the prospect of a milkshake than a control group.  
+
:::*Versions include: Public Health-Quarantine Model, Community welfare model (crime is a kind of welfare issue, also for communities), Rehabilitative approaches, Restorative justiceThese models can overlap and tend to assume that crime has natural causes that can either be mitigated through preventative welfare measures (addressing poverty and homelessness, for example) or through rehabilitation, confinement, and/or monitoringDoes not require a strong position on FW or MR, but these approaches can trigger liberty objections.  (Present discussion option here!  Could you imagine a criminal insisting on being treated retributively?  Maybe.)
  
:*Stress also exaggerates other stimuli.  Profound stress can shut down appetite and emotion.  Transition emotions (how we feel as we change activities) make us vulnerable. 
+
:*'''Other related concepts and ideas'''
  
:C30
+
::*Distinguishing retributive punishment from "penalties and interventions".  Punishment is about pain.  Penalties (like speeding and parking tickets) might also hurt, but they can be justified on utilitarian grounds (fewer accidents, etc.). So, there is an overlap in these terms.  A key difference would be that prisons would not be harsh and restrictions of liberty would not involve incarceration as much. Technology (leg braclets and geo-location) and options for medications (libido killers) are controversial in terms of consent, but might be preferrable.
  
:*Expectations of satisfaction from a food or from eating reinforce the stimulus.   Not everyone driven to obsession by thisThe “white bear” problemSuppressed thoughts can become more salient because they are suppressed.
+
:*Grounding punishment in the '''consent of the punished'''.
 +
::*Consider responses you might have to causing a harm to others"Thanks! I needed that!" "I understand there will be consequences..." But what kind?
 +
::*Try the "veil of ignorance" approach to finding just principles of punishment. (mention law review article)
  
:C31: Conditioned Hypereating emerges
+
:*Substituting the concept of a "'''tort'''" where we currently use retribution to establish equality.
 +
::*How would a "wrongful death suit" proceed for a typical upper middle class person with "umbrella liability" coverage?  Problems generalizing this as a form of guaranteed insurance!
  
:*Research questions about hypereating.  158: obesity study showing that overweight women snacked more throughout the day than non.  In another study obese test subjects were more willing to work for food rewards than other activities that they liked as well.  Not so for non-obese. 
+
===Small Group Discussion on punishment===
  
:*Reno Diet Heart Study:  used data to ask about associate of loss of control over eating, lack of feeling satisfied, and preoccupation with food.  50% of obese and 30% of overweight subjects showed these features. But 17% of learnThose showing traits of conditioned hypereating more than 2x likely to be overweight early in life.  
+
:*Recall our theories of punishment from last classHere are two thought experiments to help you sort out your views on punishment:  
  
:*161: conditioned hyper eaters more likely to rate an aroma pleasant longerIn brain image, heightened response to cookies, etc.  
+
::*1.  Imagine you are in the original position in Rawls' theory.  You don't know if, when the veil is lifted, you will be a crime victim, criminal, or neither. Moreover, you don't know if you will live in a crime prone area, have good parents, and other factors that affect criminal behavior, like Socio-economic Status (SES).  But you do know everything we currently know about the causal factors (both social and individual) that produce crime.  You also know how victim's families feel and how you would feel if you were a victim of crime. 
 +
:::*Here are three choices you might make. Does one sound better than the other two? Is there a fourth?
 +
::::*A. Contractors would choose a retributive punishment system, much like the current US system.
 +
::::*B. Contractors would choose a "public health model", more like corporatist cultures (Cavadino & Dignan).
 +
::::*C. Contractors would choose a "dual system" allowing for mix A and B.  (Maybe using the tort concept.)
  
:*considers conditioned hypereating a syndrome, cluster of symptoms.   
+
::*2.  Faculty sometimes talk about how "punitive" the grading systems in our courses need to be.  This can pit "grade inflators" vs. "toughies". As with the moral responsibility and punishment issue in the criminal justice system, some faculty (toughies) worry that if they don't give more C, D, and F grades, students will become lazy. They also might believe that a higher level of performance would occur if we put students in fear of failing the course. (!) However, other faculty (grade inflators) have the feeling that many differences in student performance are "baking in" prior to the first day of class and grading is largely "sorting" the same people over and over again. We need to give students good information about their performance, but we don't need to make harsh final judgements. If this is true, praising and blaming students more severely than needed to motivate the work seems undeserved. Grade inflators sometimes acknowledge the "free rider" problems with their view.  Do you find yourself agreeing with one group of faculty over the other?  How punitive do we need to make a particular process for it to work? What are the variables? Do you have an analysis? How would you want your kids graded?
  
:C32: Tracing the roots of conditioned hypereating
+
===PP2: Free Will, Moral Responsibility, and Punishment Position Paper===
  
:*70s researcher, Shacter — “externality” theory of obesity.  Overeating from response to external cues, over internal.  In his “cracker study” thin people reduced subsequent consumption of crackers, but obese did not.  Theorized that they respond to presence of external stimulus over being partially full.
+
:*'''Stage 1''': Please write an 1000 word maximum answer to the following prompt by '''Tuesday, December 14, 2021, 11:59.'''
  
:*Restrain theoryDieting fails due to ineffective restraint.
+
::*Topic: In this unit, we have explored different ways to think about free will, moral responsibility and punishment.  We've looked at arguments (from philosophy and the law) for "moral responsibility skepticism," critiques of our ordinary ideas about free will, and the justification of our culture's approach to punishment. Select and respond to these challenges as you ''provide your own view, with supporting reasons, of free will and responsibility and how we should approach crime and punishment''. Are there important reasons to retain retributive approaches? How should we take into consideration the growing body of knowledge about biological influences on our behavior? Should the approaches of other cultures influence our views?
 +
 
 +
:*'''Advice about collaboration''': I encourage you to collaborate with other students, but only up to the point of sharing ideas, references to class notes, and your own notes, verbally.  Collaboration is part of the academic process and the intellectual world that college courses are based on, so it is important to me that you have the possibility to collaborate.  It's a great way to make sure that a high average level of learning and development occurs.  The best way to avoid plagiarism is to NOT share text of draft answers or outlines of your answer.  Keep it verbal.  Generate your own examples.   
 +
 
 +
:*Prepare your answer and submit it in the following way:
 +
::# '''Do not put your name in the file or filename'''.  You may put your student id number in the file.  Put a word count in the file.
 +
::# In Word, check "File" and "Options" to make sure your name does not appear as author.
 +
::# Format your answer in double spaced text in a 12 point font, using normal margins. 
 +
::# Save the file in the ".docx" file format using the file name "MoralResponsibility".
 +
::# Log in to courses.alfino.org.  Upload your file to the '''"'Position Paper 2' dropbox'''. 
 +
 
 +
:*'''Your final paper is due on Tuesday, December 14, 2021, by 11:59pm'''.  Please upload it to the "Position Paper 2" dropbox, the same as for the rough draft.

Latest revision as of 21:06, 2 December 2021

26: DEC 2

Assigned

  • Cavadino, Michael and James Dignan. "Penal policy and political economy". (17)
  • Tax rates by country.[1]
  • Crime rates by country [2]
  • Homicide rates by country [3]

Cavadino, Michael and James Dignan. "Penal policy and political economy"

  • Huge increase in US incarceration rate since 1970s. 5x, highest in the world.
  • Two claims:
  • Diffs in penalty likely to continue in spite of globalization
  • One reason for this is that penality tracks political economy. (Sort of like cons/liberal trait in other areas.)
  • Starts with an overview of the influence of the US on global penal policy. To the extent that US exerts influence on other countries to move in a neo-liberal direction there may be "penal convergence". Also, incarcertation systems are one of our global exports! "correctional imperialism"
  • Some elements of the US "justice model" (retributive punishment and retributive deterrence) travel faster than others. "3 strikes" and "zero tolerance"
  • In Europe, the European Convention on Human Rights is influential. Moved Russia away from capital punishment.
  • Political Economy and Penality
  • 441: Table: Typology of political economies and their penal tendencies.
  • Neo-liberal. Example: US
  • Conservative corporatism Example: Germany in 2008 recession reinvests in industrial modernization and worker skills.
  • Social democratic corporatism (more egalitarian and secular)
  • Oriental corporatism
  • Let's review some of the connections the authors make in their discussion. (bring in crime rates)
  • 447: Table: Political economy and imprisonment rates.
  • Is neo-liberalism "criminogenic"?
  • Possibly: Evidence that unequal societies with weak community relationships suffer from worse rates of crime. 447. [Note how this might support a public health / social justice model for (instead of) punishment.]
  • Interesting: Weak link bt crime rates and imprisonment rates.
  • Some possible mechanisms: Neo-liberal societies have high social exclusion: labor market and CJ failures treated similarly. The authors suggests a "feedback loop" here: the socially excluded confirm the neo-liberal narrative.
  • By contrast, Corporatist and social dem states are inclusionary, have a communitarian ethos. (Less likely to intervene, less likely to ask citizens, “Are you alright?” Old MRFW news example [4]
  • Beckett and Western (2001) and others claim that high welfare spending correlates with low incarceration (except Japan). Also, economic inequality predicts high incarceration rates.

Some Ways of Thinking about Just Punishment

  • Traditional/Current Theories of Punishment
  • Retributive punishment / retributive deterrence. Requires very strong concept of MR and FW to be just. Retribution is justified by "moral desert". It can also involve "social exclusion" -- making it hard for offenders to vote or hold a job.
  • Utilitarian models of punishment: General principle: Reducing harm to public and offender.
  • Versions include: Public Health-Quarantine Model, Community welfare model (crime is a kind of welfare issue, also for communities), Rehabilitative approaches, Restorative justice. These models can overlap and tend to assume that crime has natural causes that can either be mitigated through preventative welfare measures (addressing poverty and homelessness, for example) or through rehabilitation, confinement, and/or monitoring. Does not require a strong position on FW or MR, but these approaches can trigger liberty objections. (Present discussion option here! Could you imagine a criminal insisting on being treated retributively? Maybe.)
  • Other related concepts and ideas
  • Distinguishing retributive punishment from "penalties and interventions". Punishment is about pain. Penalties (like speeding and parking tickets) might also hurt, but they can be justified on utilitarian grounds (fewer accidents, etc.). So, there is an overlap in these terms. A key difference would be that prisons would not be harsh and restrictions of liberty would not involve incarceration as much. Technology (leg braclets and geo-location) and options for medications (libido killers) are controversial in terms of consent, but might be preferrable.
  • Grounding punishment in the consent of the punished.
  • Consider responses you might have to causing a harm to others. "Thanks! I needed that!" "I understand there will be consequences..." But what kind?
  • Try the "veil of ignorance" approach to finding just principles of punishment. (mention law review article)
  • Substituting the concept of a "tort" where we currently use retribution to establish equality.
  • How would a "wrongful death suit" proceed for a typical upper middle class person with "umbrella liability" coverage? Problems generalizing this as a form of guaranteed insurance!

Small Group Discussion on punishment

  • Recall our theories of punishment from last class. Here are two thought experiments to help you sort out your views on punishment:
  • 1. Imagine you are in the original position in Rawls' theory. You don't know if, when the veil is lifted, you will be a crime victim, criminal, or neither. Moreover, you don't know if you will live in a crime prone area, have good parents, and other factors that affect criminal behavior, like Socio-economic Status (SES). But you do know everything we currently know about the causal factors (both social and individual) that produce crime. You also know how victim's families feel and how you would feel if you were a victim of crime.
  • Here are three choices you might make. Does one sound better than the other two? Is there a fourth?
  • A. Contractors would choose a retributive punishment system, much like the current US system.
  • B. Contractors would choose a "public health model", more like corporatist cultures (Cavadino & Dignan).
  • C. Contractors would choose a "dual system" allowing for mix A and B. (Maybe using the tort concept.)
  • 2. Faculty sometimes talk about how "punitive" the grading systems in our courses need to be. This can pit "grade inflators" vs. "toughies". As with the moral responsibility and punishment issue in the criminal justice system, some faculty (toughies) worry that if they don't give more C, D, and F grades, students will become lazy. They also might believe that a higher level of performance would occur if we put students in fear of failing the course. (!) However, other faculty (grade inflators) have the feeling that many differences in student performance are "baking in" prior to the first day of class and grading is largely "sorting" the same people over and over again. We need to give students good information about their performance, but we don't need to make harsh final judgements. If this is true, praising and blaming students more severely than needed to motivate the work seems undeserved. Grade inflators sometimes acknowledge the "free rider" problems with their view. Do you find yourself agreeing with one group of faculty over the other? How punitive do we need to make a particular process for it to work? What are the variables? Do you have an analysis? How would you want your kids graded?

PP2: Free Will, Moral Responsibility, and Punishment Position Paper

  • Stage 1: Please write an 1000 word maximum answer to the following prompt by Tuesday, December 14, 2021, 11:59.
  • Topic: In this unit, we have explored different ways to think about free will, moral responsibility and punishment. We've looked at arguments (from philosophy and the law) for "moral responsibility skepticism," critiques of our ordinary ideas about free will, and the justification of our culture's approach to punishment. Select and respond to these challenges as you provide your own view, with supporting reasons, of free will and responsibility and how we should approach crime and punishment. Are there important reasons to retain retributive approaches? How should we take into consideration the growing body of knowledge about biological influences on our behavior? Should the approaches of other cultures influence our views?
  • Advice about collaboration: I encourage you to collaborate with other students, but only up to the point of sharing ideas, references to class notes, and your own notes, verbally. Collaboration is part of the academic process and the intellectual world that college courses are based on, so it is important to me that you have the possibility to collaborate. It's a great way to make sure that a high average level of learning and development occurs. The best way to avoid plagiarism is to NOT share text of draft answers or outlines of your answer. Keep it verbal. Generate your own examples.
  • Prepare your answer and submit it in the following way:
  1. Do not put your name in the file or filename. You may put your student id number in the file. Put a word count in the file.
  2. In Word, check "File" and "Options" to make sure your name does not appear as author.
  3. Format your answer in double spaced text in a 12 point font, using normal margins.
  4. Save the file in the ".docx" file format using the file name "MoralResponsibility".
  5. Log in to courses.alfino.org. Upload your file to the "'Position Paper 2' dropbox.
  • Your final paper is due on Tuesday, December 14, 2021, by 11:59pm. Please upload it to the "Position Paper 2" dropbox, the same as for the rough draft.