Popular punitiveness? Punishment and attitudes to law in post-Soviet Georgia

Georgia is the only country in the post-Soviet region where incarceration rates significantly grew in the 2000s. Then in 2013, the prison population was halved through a mass amnesty. Did this punitiveness and its sudden relaxation after 2012 impact attitudes to the law? We find that these attitudes...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kupatadze, Alexander (Author)
Contributors: Slade, Gavin 1980- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
Published: 2017
In: Europe Asia studies
Year: 2017
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Summary:Georgia is the only country in the post-Soviet region where incarceration rates significantly grew in the 2000s. Then in 2013, the prison population was halved through a mass amnesty. Did this punitiveness and its sudden relaxation after 2012 impact attitudes to the law? We find that these attitudes remained negative regardless of levels of punitiveness. Furthermore, the outcomes of sentencing may be less important than procedures leading to sentencing. Procedural justice during both punitiveness and liberalisation was not assured. This may explain the persistence of negative attitudes to law. The Georgian case shows that politically-driven punitive turns or mass amnesties are unlikely to solve the problem of legal nihilism in the region
ISSN:1465-3427
DOI:10.1080/09668136.2017.1357165