Eighth Amendment Differentness

William W. Berry
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Abstract

This symposium article is part of a broader discussion framed by the question of whether the United States Supreme Court’s recent decision in Miller v. Alabama was a “bombshell” or a “baby step.” Miller held that the Eighth Amendment barred the use of mandatory juvenile life-without-parole (JLWOP) sentences.As the fifth case in a decade to expand the scope of the Eighth Amendment and the second to broaden its application to juvenile life-without-parole, Miller may be no more than another incremental step within a broader line of cases. On the other hand, Miller suggests a number of possible avenues for considering how to broaden the Eighth Amendment.And the need to expand the Eighth Amendment has not diminished with the Court’s work over the past decade. In an age of penal populism, the United States remains an outlier, arguably in the history of the world, in its use of mass incarceration of criminal offenders.Given this reality, this article does not seek to make a normative prediction as to what Miller will mean, as others in the symposium have done quite well. Instead, the article explores what Miller can mean. In doing so, the article aims to highlight different avenues of extending Miller such that it can become a bombshell over time, albeit by offering potential baby steps to theorists and litigators alike.This contribution, then, illuminates the potential doctrinal and theoretical consequences of the Miller decision within the broader context of the Supreme Court’s Eighth Amendment jurisprudence. Without arguing for one normative outcome over the other and recognizing that the Court’s work in this area has been largely incremental, this article offers an intellectual compass that develops many of the arguments for broadening the Eighth Amendment made more plausible after the Miller decision.At the heart of this exploration is the concept that “juveniles are different.” Specifically, this article argues that there are two distinct meanings of this conceptualization: (1) that juveniles are unique as offenders and (2) that juvenile life-without-parole is a unique punishment. While certainly not mutually exclusive, each interpretation offers its own set of consequences and paths to pursue in challenging criminal sentences under the Eighth Amendment. Part I of the article provides the context for the Miller case, outlining the theoretical underpinnings of the Court’s Eighth Amendment jurisprudence. Part II describes the Court’s “different” jurisprudence, linking the concept of “juveniles are different” to the Court’s longstanding view that “death is different.” In Part III, the article demonstrates how the two possible interpretations of the Court’s statement in Miller that “juveniles are different” — as a character-based form of differentness and, in the form of JLWOP, as a punishment-based form of differentness — create distinct theoretical bases for broadening the scope of the Eighth Amendment. Finally, Parts IV and V explore the potential theoretical and doctrinal consequences of each of those understandings.
第八修正案的差异
这篇专题讨论会文章是美国最高法院最近在米勒诉阿拉巴马州案中的裁决是“重磅炸弹”还是“一小步”这一问题所构成的更广泛讨论的一部分。米勒认为,第八修正案禁止对未成年人强制判处终身监禁,不得假释。作为十年来扩大第八修正案适用范围的第五起案件,以及将其适用范围扩大到青少年不得假释终身监禁的第二起案件,米勒案可能只不过是一系列更广泛案件中的又一个渐进步骤。另一方面,米勒提出了一些考虑如何扩大第八修正案的可能途径。扩大第八修正案的必要性并没有随着法院在过去十年的工作而减弱。在这个刑罚民粹主义盛行的时代,美国在大规模监禁罪犯方面,可以说是世界历史上的一个异类。鉴于这一现实,本文并不试图对米勒的意思做出规范性的预测,就像研讨会上其他人做得很好一样。相反,这篇文章探讨了米勒的意思。在这样做的过程中,本文旨在强调扩展米勒的不同途径,以便随着时间的推移,它可能成为一个重磅炸弹,尽管对理论家和诉讼律师都提供了潜在的婴儿步骤。因此,这一贡献阐明了在最高法院第八修正案判例的更广泛背景下,米勒案判决的潜在理论和理论后果。本文并没有对某一规范性结果进行争论,也没有认识到最高法院在这一领域的工作在很大程度上是渐进式的,而是提供了一个智力指南针,发展了许多关于扩大第八修正案的论点,这些论点在米勒案判决后变得更加合理。这一探索的核心是“青少年是不同的”这一概念。具体来说,本文认为这一概念有两个不同的含义:(1)未成年人作为罪犯是独特的;(2)未成年人无期徒刑是一种独特的惩罚。虽然肯定不是相互排斥的,但每种解释都提供了自己的一套后果和途径,可以根据第八修正案对刑事判决提出质疑。文章的第一部分提供了米勒案的背景,概述了最高法院第八修正案判例的理论基础。第二部分描述了最高法院的“不同”判例,将“青少年不同”的概念与最高法院长期以来“死亡不同”的观点联系起来。在第三部分中,本文说明了对法院在米勒案中关于“少年是不同的”的陈述的两种可能的解释- -作为一种基于性格的差异形式和以JLWOP的形式作为一种基于惩罚的差异形式- -如何为扩大第八修正案的范围创造了不同的理论基础。最后,第四和第五部分探讨了每种理解的潜在理论和教义后果。
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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