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Crime and Punishment
In Chesterton's day, the leading criminologists believed that criminal
behavior was a form of illness. Consequently, they attempted a program
of "rehabilitation" of criminals that was analogous to medical treatment.
The causes of crime were thought to derive exclusively from heredity and
environment.
Chesterton's line of attack was to insist on free will and the role of
human responsibility in the choices made both by criminals and by the
law abiding. Chesterton is all common sense on this subject:
A man may lie still and be cured of a malady. But he must not lie
still if he wants to be cured of a sin. If a man is to be saved from
influenza, he may be a patient. But if he is to be saved from forging,
he must be not a patient but an impatient He must be personally
impatient with forgery. All moral reform must start in the active not
the passive will.
Imprisonment, Chesterton believed, must be thought of as a specific punishment
for a specific crime. If imprisonment were thought of as therapeutic,
he reasoned, convicts would be kept in jail until some "expert" decided
they had "recovered" (had been rehabilitated). If heredity and environment
account for all crimes, he argued, then law enforcement would become focused
on certain types of people (perhaps the poor) and in certain neighborhoods
(perhaps the slums).
According to Philip Jenkins, an expert on both Chesterton and on criminology,
Chesterton's ideas were considered bizarre by the experts of his own day,
but have now become accepted as "mainstream" by the criminology establishment
and the courts. Jenkins calls Chesterton the "forgotten prophet" in this
field.
With the popular acceptance of sociobiology today, however, the idea
of crime as an illness may now be poised for a comeback. [J.P.]
[For further reading in Chesterton's
works, see "The Romance of Orthodoxy" in Orthodoxy; "On the Science
of Sociology" in Avowals and Denials; and "The Innocence of the Criminal"
in Fancies versus Fads. Also, read Jenkins in the Aug-Nov 1990,
Chesterton Review.]
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