It would be natural to describe the Queen's procedure as the rejection of the basic individual right of fair trial; indeed had Alice lived in the present decade, one might with reason have drawn the matter to the attention of the International Commission of Jurists. And yet there is a respectable body of current opinion which makes demands which are not really very different in their essentials from those of the Queen, demands made by penal reformers for treatment first and no trial at all. Psychiatric care may now be substituted for execution in some cases, but this reflects only a difference of opinion on the relative efficacy of the two methods of treatment. And the Queen could at least claim for her proposal the absolute certainty of preventing further crimes by the same offender.
The point of making this comparison between the Queen and the reformers is to raise again the question of punishment and responsibility, to claim that the very notions of crime, trial and punishment are in themselves such an important factor in the treatment of antisocial behaviour that we cannot afford to let them wither away. Some social and penal reformers may be aghast at such a claim, fearing that any such wilful deviation from the prevailing trend would lead eventually to the reintroduction of a purely retributive system; and in their eyes retribution conjures up, somewhat irrationally, pictures of pointless, brutal and in human punishments. Such fears are unfounded. It is not the efficacy of the various particular types of punishment which is at issue, but the efficacy of the whole conceptual scheme which some reformers seek to abolish.