Criminalizing Terrorist Babble: Canada's Dubious New Terrorist Speech Crime

Craig Forcese, Kent Roach
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Before the introduction of Bill C-51, the Canadian government expressed interest in a terrorism “glorification” offence, responding to Internet materials regarded by officials as terrorist propaganda and as promoting “radicalization.” Bill C-51 introduces a slightly less broad terrorism offence that applies to those who knowingly promote or advocate “terrorism offences in general” while knowing or being reckless as to whether terrorism offences “may be committed as a result of such communication.” This article addresses the merits of these new speech-based terrorism offences. It includes analyses of: the sociological data concerning radicalization and “radicalization to violence”; existing offences that apply to speech associated with terrorism; comparative experience with glorification crimes; and the restraints that the Charter would place on any similar Canadian law. We conclude that a glorification offence would be ill-suited to Canada’s social and legal environment and that even the slightly more restrained new advocacy offence is flawed. This is especially true for Charter purposes given the less restrictive alternative of applying existing terrorism and other criminal offences to hate speech and speech that incites, threatens, or facilitates terrorism. We are also concerned that the new speech offence could have counter-productive practical public safety effects. We favour that part of Bill C-51 that allows for court-ordered deletion of material on the Internet that was criminal before Bill C-51, namely material that counsels the commission of terrorism offences. However, Bill C-51’s broader provision that allows for the deletion of material that “advocates or promotes the commission of terrorism offences in general” suffers the same flaws as its enactment of a new offence for communicating such statements.
将恐怖分子胡言乱语定罪:加拿大可疑的新恐怖主义言论罪
在引入C-51号法案之前,加拿大政府对“美化”恐怖主义的罪行表示了兴趣,并对被官员视为恐怖主义宣传和促进“激进化”的互联网材料做出了回应。条例草案C-51引入了一项范围略小的恐怖主义罪行,适用于那些明知或不顾恐怖主义罪行是否“可能因这种通讯而犯下”而明知或鼓吹“一般恐怖主义罪行”的人。本文讨论了这些新的基于言论的恐怖主义罪行的优点。它包括分析:关于激进化和“暴力激进化”的社会学数据;适用于与恐怖主义有关的言论的现有罪行;美化犯罪的比较经验;以及《宪章》将对任何类似的加拿大法律施加的限制。我们的结论是,美化罪将不适合加拿大的社会和法律环境,即使是稍微克制的新宣传罪也有缺陷。就《宪章》的宗旨而言,这一点尤其正确,因为限制较少的替代办法是将现有的恐怖主义和其他刑事罪行适用于仇恨言论和煽动、威胁或促进恐怖主义的言论。我们亦关注新的言论罪行可能对公共安全产生反作用。我们赞成第C-51号法案中允许法院下令删除在第C-51号法案之前已在互联网上构成犯罪的材料的部分,即建议实施恐怖主义罪行的材料。然而,C-51号法案的更广泛条款允许删除“鼓吹或促进恐怖主义罪行的一般行为”的材料,这与它为传播这种言论而制定一项新罪行同样存在缺陷。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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