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- article?assetid=0238860-0 accessdate "2010-08-04".
- article?assetid=0238860-0 accessdate "2010-09-16".
- article?assetid=0238860-0 date "August 2010".
- article?assetid=0238860-0 first "Patrick D.".
- article?assetid=0238860-0 isCitedBy Punishment.
- article?assetid=0238860-0 last "McAnany".
- article?assetid=0238860-0 publisher "Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia".
- article?assetid=0238860-0 quote "Because punishment is both painful and guilt producing, its application calls for a justification. In Western culture, four basic justifications have been given: retribution, deterrence, rehabilitation, and incapacitation. The history of formal punitive systems is one of a gradual transition from familial and tribal authority to the authority of organized society. Although parents today retain much basic authority to discipline their children, physical beatings and other severe deprivations—once widely tolerated—may now be called child abuse and result in criminal charges".
- article?assetid=0238860-0 quote "Punishment describes the imposition by some authority of a deprivation — usually painful — on a person who has violated a law, rule, or other norm. When the violation is of the criminal law of society there is a formal process of accusation and proof followed by imposition of a sentence by a designated official, usually a judge. Informally, any organized group — most typically the family, in rearing children — may punish perceived wrongdoers.".
- article?assetid=0238860-0 title "Justification for punishment".
- article?assetid=0238860-0 title "Punishment".
- article?assetid=0238860-0 url article?assetid=0238860-0.
- article?assetid=0238860-0 work "Online".