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punishment. For hundreds of years the Tower of London was regarded as the premier prison in the
land.
The progress of civilization has resulted in a vast change in both the theory and in the method
of punishment.
With the growth of law, the state took over the punitive function and provided itself
with the machinery of justice for the maintenance of public order. From that time crimes were against
the state, and such punishment as lynching became illegal. In the eighteenth century the humanitarian
movement began to teach the dignity of the individual and to emphasize rationality and responsibility.
The result was the reduction of punishment both in quantity and in severity, the improvement of the
prison system, and the first attempts to study the psychology of crime and
to distinguish classes of
criminals with a view to their improvement. Later law breakers were considered as a product of social
evolution and cannot be regarded as solely responsible for their disposition to offences. Crime was
treated as a disease. Punishment, therefore, can be justified only if it either protects society or acts as a
deterrent, or when it aims at the moral regeneration of the criminal.
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