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JUSTIFYING LIBERAL RETRIBUTIVE JUSTICE: PUNISHMENT, CRIMINALIZATION, AND HOLISTIC RETRIBUTIVISM* * I thank Peter Chau, Alejandro Chehtman, Erin Kelly and Matt Matravers for comments and criticisms on very early versions of this article. I am also grateful to audiences at the Morrell Workshop in Political Theory at the University of York, United Kingdom, and the University of Bogazici, Turkey, where a draft of this article was presented. For financial support I acknowledge the research project FONDECYT Postdoctoral nº 3120155 and the Millennium Nucleus for the Study of Stateness and Democracy in Latin America (RS130002) supported by the Millennium Scientific Initiative of the Ministry of Economy, Development, and Tourism of Chile.

ABSTRACT

In this article I explore whether liberal retributive justice should be conceived of either individualistically or holistically. I critically examine the individualistic account of retributive justice and suggest that the question of retribution – i.e., whether and when punishment of an individual is compatible with just treatment of that individual – must be answered holistically. By resorting to the ideal of sensitive reasons, a model of legitimacy at the basis of our best normative models of democracy, the article argues that in modern liberal democracies, punishment of an offender A for f is compatible with just treatment of A only if punishment of an individual for f can be legitimate in A's and A's fellow citizens' eyes. Only once retributive justice is understood in this holistic fashion the imposition of punishment can be made compatible with just treatment of individuals.

Keywords
Retributive Justice; Punishment; Criminalization; Liberalism; John Rawls

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