retributivism
Retributivism is a theory of punishment that holds that individuals who commit wrongful acts deserve to be punished in proportion to the seriousness of their wrongdoing. The central idea is moral desert: punishment is justified by the offender’s culpability, independently of any social or practical benefits that punishment might produce, such as deterring crime or reforming the offender. In this view, the purpose of punishment is to respond to moral offense and to restore a balance harmed by the wrongdoing.
Key principles include imputability (the offender could be held morally responsible), desert (punishment is deserved for
Retributivism is often contrasted with utilitarian theories of punishment that justify penalties for their future effects