青少年自我控制与法律责任

Tyler K. Fagan, K. Sifferd, W. Hirstein
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摘要

受越来越多的神经科学和心理学证据的影响,美国刑事法院最近倾向于认为青少年的罪责天生就比成年人轻。为了支持这一趋势,本章认为,刑法的责任代理概念既需要理解个人行为的认知能力,也需要使个人行为符合法律标准的意志控制。这些能力,除了其他方面,还需要一套最小的执行功能——一套主要在前额皮质中实现的心理过程,比如计划和抑制——在青春期后期,甚至在某些情况下,这些功能都处于明显的不成熟状态。根据这些认知和意志能力如何在成熟的大脑中发展的科学证据,作者描绘了青少年责任的标量结构,并提出了一些改革青少年司法系统以反映这种标量结构的可能方向。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Juvenile Self-Control and Legal Responsibility
US criminal courts have recently moved toward seeing juveniles as inherently less culpable than their adult counterparts, influenced by a growing mass of neuroscientific and psychological evidence. In support of this trend, this chapter argues that the criminal law’s notion of responsible agency requires both the cognitive capacity to understand one’s actions and the volitional control to conform one’s actions to legal standards. These capacities require, among other things, a minimal working set of executive functions—a suite of mental processes, mainly realized in the prefrontal cortex, such as planning and inhibition—which remain in significant states of immaturity through late adolescence, and in some cases beyond. Drawing on scientific evidence of how these cognitive and volitional capacities develop in the maturing brain, the authors sketch a scalar structure of juvenile responsibility, and suggest some possible directions for reforming the juvenile justice system to reflect this scalar structure.
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