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Communicating with Prisoners

Public Interest Analysis

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I. Communicative Walls E. Economic Analysis 1. Early Economics of Prisoners' Communication

Notes

Leading 18th-Century Works on Punishment

Books published in the 18th century, widely known in the public sphere in England during that century, and discussing lawful punishment in detail.

The Rhetoric of the Greatest Happiness of the Greatest Number

Beccaria’s and Bentham’s happiness maximization seems to have been fundamentally exhortative rather than consequentially calculative.

Samuelson, Bentham, & Foundations of Economic Analysis

Bentham and Samuelson sought to provide foundations for economic analysis. They refused to generalize across humans their struggles for social priority.

Bentham’s Rhetorical Sophistication

Jeremy Bentham was a rhetorically sophisticated writer, not a socially obtuse utilitarian.

Jeremy Bentham’s Intellectual Achievement

Jeremy Bentham is one of the most important figures in Western intellectual history.

Rationale of Punishment Doesn’t Translate Dumont

Bentham editors and scholars have inaccurately described The Rationale of Punishment as a translation of Dumont’s Théorie des Peines et des Récompenses.

Bentham on Punishment Through Dumont and Smith

Texts on communication with prisoners in Rationale of Punishment probably came directly from a manuscript folio that Bentham wrote about 1778.

Editing Bentham’s Manuscripts on Punishment

The Rationale of Punishment (1830) better indicates Bentham’s writing on punishment than does Dumont’s Théorie des Peines et des Récompenses (1811).

Source-Critical Analysis: Bentham on Communicating with Prisoners

The Rationale of Punishment, not Dumont’s Théorie des Peines et des Récompenses, contains Bentham’s original text on communicating with prisoners.

Dating Bentham’s Texts in the Rationale of Punishment

Although The Rationale of Punishment was first published in 1830, Jeremy Bentham wrote its texts on communicating with prisoners about 1778.

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Communicating with Prisoners