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Social Punishment 

When you are ignored or ignore someone who has done something particularly horrible or otherwise disgusting.
Ann, Demi, and Jill are walking down the street when they see a hot guy.

Hot Guy: Hi girls

Ann to other 2: woah he's a hot guy!

Jill to hot guy: Wanna come over my house??

**Well Jill has "back stabbed" Ann, because, Ann obviously adored him first.**

-Jill is now on social punishment and no one envolved in the situation is to talk to her.
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Theory of the Social Construction of Punishments and Executions

A critical criminological theory arguing that what counts as a just punishment, what forms of execution are considered acceptable, and who is deemed deserving of state violence are not natural or divinely ordained but socially constructed through historical struggle, cultural values, and power relations. The theory examines how punishment changes: from public torture to imprisonment, from execution for theft to life sentences, from burning heretics to lethal injection. It shows that these shifts reflect changing social norms, economic systems, and technologies of control, not a simple moral progress. The theory challenges any claim that current penal practices are the only rational or humane options.
Example: “The theory of the social construction of punishments and executions explained why the guillotine was once seen as ‘humane’ and is now seen as barbaric—not because suffering changed, but because society’s construction of legitimate violence shifted.”