Public Policy Analysis
There is a sense that politics operates on a continuum scale whose extremes are rationality and irrationality. Politicians make laws that can be seen from both perspectives depending on the particular position of the person judging whether the particular statute is good or bad. Public policy can be judged by either rational choice theory or the converse of that. The difference in the two can be seen in how crimes are litigated. A rational person can make the choice whether an act is right or wrong and has specific knowledge of how society will view that act. An irrational person is one who, for some reason, is not deemed competent to understand that what they have done is criminal in nature. Irrationality is the reason that individuals below a certain age cutoff are generally not treated with the same deterrent stance as adults, why people with metal deficiencies are held to a different standard, and why a person can be deemed temporarily incompetent due to an incredible stress (Dye, 2012, 60). The criminal justice system, and the laws which control it try to gage the understanding that the person committing the act had, and base their actions on that. This paper looks at public policy from the stance of rationality vs. irrationality.
The text addresses rationality and irrationality as it relates to public policy. Deterrence is the rational strategy that has been adopted to fight crime in society (Dye, 2012, 58). The goal of that strategy is to ensure that people are deterred from committing crimes initially. According to Keel (2005) "The central points of this theory are:
The human being is a rational actor
Rationality involves an end/means calculation
People (freely) choose all behavior, both conforming and deviant, based on their rational calculations
The central element of calculation involves a cost benefit analysis: Pleasure vs. Pain
Choice, with all other conditions equal, will be directed towards the maximization of individual pleasure
Choice can be controlled through the perception and understanding of the potential pain or punishment that will follow an act judged to be in violation of the social good, the social contract
The state is responsible for maintaining order and preserving the common good through a system of laws (this system is the embodiment of the social contract),
The Swiftness, Severity, and Certainty of punishment are the key elements in understanding a law's ability to control human behavior"
This is a logical sequence that public policy is being made with regard to how a person commits an act that is considered to be criminal. Unfortunately, and this can be seen by the underlined word all used in the third point, this is an extremely biased point-of-view that does not consider all possible variables that exist. It is true that a people are responsible for the positive or negative choices that they make, when they have the capacity to make those choices, but there are just too many times when an individual's brain is not acting rationally. It is at these times that the legislators have to think rationally and not hold every action to this high standard.
It can also be said that this strategy (deterrence) does not work with everyone. Once a person has committed a crime and become known to the criminal justice system, the goal of leaders in that system is to find ways to deter that person from committing any future crimes (Nordin, Pauleen, & Gorman, 2009; Walsh, 2010). Repeat offenders are generally dealt with more and more harshly, in an effort to stop them from committing any more crimes, but the focus of deterrence will always remain on the individuals who have not yet committed any crimes, in an effort to keep them from getting started down the wrong path in the first place.
Dye (2012) talks about how the criminal justice system is supposed to work under the rationality model. There are three levels to punishment which Keel (2005) calls key elements. The punishment of the criminal act must be certain swift and severe. In talking of these three elements Dye (2012, 62/63) says there is;
The certainty that a crime will be followed by costly punishment. Justice must be sure;
The swiftness of the punishment following the crime. Long delays between crime and punishment break the link in the mind of the criminal between the criminal act and its consequences....
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