Criminal Justice, Democratic Fairness, and Cultural Pluralism: The Case of Aboriginal Peoples in Canada

Melissa S. Williams
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引用次数: 12

Abstract

The place of criminal justice in democracy has been little studied in recent democratic theory. This is surprising insofar as much of the theory of democracy concerns how shared norms become binding law, and where are shared norms more forcefully expressed or enforced than in the domain of criminal law? Perhaps the reason for democratic theorists’ recent neglect of criminal justice and punishment is the fact that there is so little agreement in most democratic societies as to the purpose of punishment. Is it fundamentally retributive in purpose, and therefore appropriately measured out in proportion to the seriousness of the offense? Is its purpose deterrent, so that no greater (and no lesser) punishment should be inflicted than is necessary to dissuade individuals from violating the law? Or is its purpose rehabilitative, to “discipline” in its root meaning as synonymous with “teach”? Or, finally, we might conceive of criminal justice as restorative, with the aim of repairing victims’ injuries and reintegrating offenders into responsible membership in the community. There is clearly no settled consensus on these questions in contemporary democracies.
刑事司法、民主公平与文化多元:以加拿大原住民为例
近代民主理论对刑事司法在民主中的地位研究甚少。这是令人惊讶的,因为许多民主理论关注的是共同规范如何成为约束性法律,以及在哪里共同规范比在刑法领域更有力地表达或执行?也许民主理论家最近忽视刑事司法和惩罚的原因是,在大多数民主社会中,人们对惩罚的目的几乎没有共识。从根本上说,它的目的是报复吗?因此,它是否与犯罪的严重性成比例?其目的是否具有威慑力,以便不施加比劝阻个人违法所必需的更大(或更小)的惩罚?或者它的目的是为了康复,把“纪律”作为“教导”的同义词?或者,最后,我们可以设想刑事司法具有恢复性,其目的是修复受害者的伤害,并使罪犯重新融入社会,成为负责任的成员。在当代民主国家,对这些问题显然没有确定的共识。
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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