Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Crime and Punishment
- Law and justice
- Why justice is
important for
Christians
- Bible says that God is just and will
reward the good and punish the bad
who sin
- Bible and Jesus say Christians
should treat people equally and
fairly
- The church encourages Christians to
work for justice eg. Jubilee 2000 to
cancel world debt charged to poor
countries
- Why justice is
important for
muslims
- Qur'an says that Allah is just and will
reward the good and punish the bad on
the last day
- Islam teaches that it is unjust
to charge interest on money
as it takes money from the
poor
- The Shari'ah says Muslims must act justly
- The pillar of Zakah means all
Muslims must give to charity
every year
- Why we need laws
- scenes of rioting and
vandalism of cars
and property
- normal daily life
breaks down
completely
- the weak are exploited
- anarchy and destruction
- civilisation breaks down
- everything that
people have
achieved is
destroyed
- Why we need justice
- if some laws are unjust, this
may lead people to believe that
all laws are unjust and if this is
the case then laws aren't
fulfilling their job
- If a law is unjust then people
will think it's right to break
laws. This attitude could
cause the whole basis of
society to disintegrate.
- If a law is unjust, people wont obey it and may campaign
against it, causing trouble in society. eg. Civil rights,
campaign in US Rosa Parks bus boycott (lost money- bus
companies put pressure on the government)
- If laws don't create a just
society, people will think the
legal system is not working
and may start a civil war eg.
Kosora against the Serbian
legal system
- If laws are unjust they will
disrupt society rather than
unite society
- Theories of punishment and
arguments for and against
them
- Retribution
- POSITIVES
- the victims feel that
the criminal got
what they deserved
and are suffering
for what they have
done
- NEGATIVES
- retribution doesn't work -
victims often feel the
criminal has not been
punished enough
- victims do not feel justice has
been done so cannot move on.
- in cases of murder, some
would argue that retribution
can never be achieved
- Deterrence
- POSITIVES
- punishment may put
someone off doing this action
again.
- punishment will stop
someone doing it in
the first place if they
have seen someone
punished
- NEGATIVES
- prison figures are increasing
- prisons full
- almost half of all prisoners commit
crime again once released
- Reform
- POSITIVES
- allows criminals to gain education and job
training so that once related they can become
a law abiding citizen
- NEGATIVES
- it simply does't work - people are who they are and are unable to change
- some argue reform isn't punishment - teaching and
education goes against what punishment is supposed to be
- Protection
- POSTIVES
- by keeping criminals locked up in prison they
can cause no harm to the public
- NEGATIVES
- it only works while criminals are locked away
- many are being released back into society
and commit crimes again
- Capital punishment
- China, Iran, Iraq, Saudi
Arabia and the US have
had the most executions
in the world last year.
- non-religious
reasons FOR
- retribution- people who commit
serious crimes like murder, deserve
to die
- deterrence- a death penalty makes people afraid to
commit crime (there is no evidence for this)
- protection- with re-offending
rates at 70%, we do not want to
release murderers from prison
incase they reoffend
- it is cheaper to kill people. Consider
£30,000 per year to keep someone in
prison for life, vs. the one-off cost of an
execution (though, evidence from the USA
shows trials cost up to 3 times as much as
in death penalty cases
- non-religious
reasons AGAINST
- it is impossible to rectify mistakes. If
you execute someone and then find
out they were innocent there is
nothing you can do.
- Timothy Evans, Mahmood
Mattan, David Bantley
- there is no evidence that the death penalty is more of a
deterrent than prison. In the USA, there are more capital
crimes committed per head of the population of the UK
- there is no opportunity for
reformation. There have
been several cases of
serious criminals such as
Nicky Cruz, who have
turned from a life of crime
to help people in later life
- Christian arguments FOR
- "an eye for an eye, a tooth for a
tooth" = the punishment should
be fitting for the crime
- "whoever sheds the blood of
man, by man shall his blood be
shed" = capital punishment
should be used on those that
take a life
- "Everyone must submit himself to the governing authorities, for
there is no authority except that which God has established" =
christians should obey the laws and punishments of the
government of the country they are living in
- Christian arguments AGAINST
- "thou shalt not kill" = killing in any circumstance and for any reason is wrong
- Bible teaches that life is sacred and only God can
take life, even as punishment-sanctity of life
- Jesus banned revenge and retribution when he said 'an eye for
an eye' was wrong "if someone strikes you on the right cheek,
turn to them the other also".
- Muslim arguments
FOR
- God sets down this punishment in the Qur'an for murder, adultery and apostasy
- Mohammed sentenced people
to death and he is the
exemplar of a good muslim
- Shari'ah sets down
this punishment for
some crimes
- Muslim arguments AGAINST
- capital punishment is recommended but not compulsory
- Shari'ah says the victims of the family can
claim blood money instead of the death
penalty
- The Qur'an gives strict guidelines under which the death
penalty can be given but these are rarely met so it should
not be used
- Drugs and Alcohol
- drugs and the law
- ILLEGAL DRUGS: heroin, cocaine,
ecstasy, LSD and cannabis
- RECREATIONAL DRUGS: people use for pleasure and
relaxation. Most are illegal, however tobacco and alcohol
are legal (some religions would class caffeine as a
recreational drug)
- PRESCRIPTION DRUGS: prescribed by a doctor to treat a medical condition, and are legal
- alcohol and the law
- have to be 18 to buy alcohol in the UK
- cannot drink and drive
- cannot serve or
sell alcohol to a
drunk person
- pubs need
licences to sell
alcohol on
their premises
- an 'off-licence'
has a licence to
sell alcohol to
be taken off
the premises
- effects of drugs and alcohol
- caffeine is a stimulant - keeps people alert and awake
- alcohol is a depressant:
relaxes people - can cause
depression- makes people
dunk - can lose control
- cannabis is often taken as a relaxant: can be taken for pain
relief or for a high - can cause mental health issues
- cocaine is a stimulant that lasts for 30 mins:
highly addictive and expensive -can lead to
heart problems and convulsions - an
overdose can kill
- heroine is an opiate: relaxes people, relieves pain - highly
addictive - can cause dangerous withdrawal symptoms, make
people sick - overdose can kill - diseases can spread through the
needles the addicts use
- drugs can ruin family life as the pressure
on loved ones can be very difficult - can
lead to financial ruin
- Christian teachings on drugs
- The bible says that your body is the temple
of the holy spirit - suggests you should
treat it with respect as it is made by God
and holy
- The bible says "thou shalt not kill" -
taking/dealing drugs can lead to death
and violent crime
- bible says Christians
should obey the
governing authorities
- suggests they
should follow the
government;s law,
especially on drugs
- Jesus taught people to love thy
neighbour - selling illegal
drugs is not a loving thing to
do
- the 10 commandments state
"honour your mother and
father" - suggests ruining a
family through drug use is
wrong
- jesus helped the sick so he
would not be against
medicinal drugs
- Christian reasons FOR alcohol
- paul encouraged timothy to drink for
medical reasons
- Jesus turned water into
wine
- drinking in moderation is acceptable if it doesnt lead to
sin
- Christian reasons AGAINST alcohol
- drinking encourages others to drink too much
- alcohol is much stronger
and more dangerous
today than in Bible times
- drinking water in Bible times was
dangerous - alcohol was safer
- alcohol abuse in rampant in
society - best not to drink as
an example to others
- Muslim views on drugs and alcohol
- dont abuse
bodies with
drugs and
alcohol - the
Qur'an
states: "Do
not make
your own
hands
contribute to
your own
destruction".
- Qur'an forbids alcohol
- Mohammed
also banned
and didn't
use it
- Islam teaches that a person
who is not sick doesn't
need drugs
- taking drugs is forbidden under Shari'ah law
- Muslims should obey the laws of the
land (eg. UK laws)
- Allah gave you a body - it
is his to take away, not
the user's
- can distract from prayer and encourage sin
- some Muslims
smoke.
- many will
sell alcohol
and tobacco
at corner
shops
- many
others
would find
selling
alcohol
unacceptable