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Dissertation Chapters | Criminology and Forensic Science | United States of America | Volume 14 Issue 4, April 2025 | Popularity: 4.5 / 10
From Punishment to Prevention: The Integration of Procedural Justice and Deterrence
Dr. Alaina Steele
Abstract: This paper explores how integrating procedural justice with deterrence theory can strengthen crime prevention and legal compliance. While deterrence remains central to United States criminal justice policy, its effectiveness is often questioned. Procedural justice, which emphasizes voice, neutrality, respect, and trustworthiness, offers a pathway to enhance legitimacy and voluntary compliance. When people believe they have been treated fairly by the legal system, they are more likely to voluntarily comply with laws and directives, not out of fear of punishment, but because they trust the system and respect its authority. This approach fosters public ?buy-in? and cooperation, which are essential for long-term social control. Rather than abandoning deterrence, this paper proposes an integrated model that tempers punitive threats with fairness, reframing enforcement through a legitimacy-based lens. What sets this paper apart is its conceptual framework that positions procedural justice not as an alternative to deterrence, but as a necessary complement?offering a novel synthesis that addresses persistent concerns about the limits of punitive strategies. This model contributes to the field by offering a more sustainable and trust-driven framework for crime prevention, one that reinforces deterrence while addressing its limitations through the lens of procedural justice.
Keywords: Procedural Justice, Deterrence Theory, Crime Prevention, Social Control, Criminal Justice Policy
Edition: Volume 14 Issue 4, April 2025
Pages: 1103 - 1107
DOI: https://www.doi.org/10.21275/SR25413224334
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