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Book Description: In
this controversial and compassionate book, the distinguished
psychiatrist James Gilligan proposes a radically new way of
thinking about violence and how to prevent it. Violence is most
often addressed in moral and legal terms: "How evil is
this action, and how much punishment does it deserve?"
Unfortunately, this way of thinking, the basis for our legal
and political institutions, does nothing to shed light on the
causes of violence. Violent criminals have been Gilligan's teachers,
and he has been their student. Prisons are microcosms of the
societies in which they exist, and by examining them in detail,
we can learn about society as a whole.
Gilligan suggests treating
violence as a public health problem. He advocates initiating
radical social and economic change to attack the root causes
of violence, focusing on those at increased risk of becoming
violent, and dealing with those who are already violent as if
they were in quarantine rather than in constraint for their
punishment and for society's revenge. The twentieth century
was steeped in violence. If we attempt to understand the violence
of individuals, we may come to prevent the collective violence
that threatens our future far more than all the individual crimes
put together.
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