遥远的声音,过去和现在:隔离对奴隶船俘虏和寻求庇护者法庭叙述的影响

Taran Patel
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引用次数: 1

摘要

第一部分比较了19世纪的羚羊和阿米斯塔德的案例,以确定为什么尽管事实模式相似,但它们却导致了不同的结果。“羚羊”号涉及大约280名非洲俘虏的命运,他们是在一艘奴隶贸易船上被一艘美国缉私船拦截后发现的。由于当时美国的奴隶贸易是非法的,俘虏被运送到萨凡纳接受审判,通过审判来决定他们的身份是自由还是奴隶。经过漫长的审判和上诉程序,西班牙和葡萄牙提出了对俘虏的要求,最高法院裁定,这些俘虏是由非美国人要求的。民族是奴隶。法院的理由是,无论奴隶贸易多么“可恶”,美国都有义务承认其他国家参与奴隶贸易的权利。相比之下,阿米斯塔德关注的是一艘奴隶贸易船上的俘虏的命运,这些俘虏叛变,试图航行到非洲,但被一艘美国船只俘虏。尽管西班牙政府声称这些俘虏是其财产,但最高法院还是下令释放他们。第一部分探讨了这些不同的结果,并认为羚羊俘虏的故事在诉讼过程中缺席,部分原因是决定在确定他们的地位之前将俘虏隔离为奴隶。特别是,它认为这种隔离影响了羚羊的结果,因为它阻止了被囚禁者分享他们的轶事,并将它们翻译成一种能与他们的法律顾问、公众和法官产生共鸣的格式。相比之下,阿米斯塔德的俘虏虽然也被拘留,但却被安置在离那些能帮助他们的人很近的地方。通过理解和利用律师的才能和专业知识,以及法官和公众的偏见,他们能够将自己的真相转化为法庭上获胜的叙述。第二部分认为,200年后,类似的孤立环境压制了另一个法律地位未定群体的故事:寻求庇护者。虽然奴隶船的俘虏是带着锁链被迫进入该国的,而寻求庇护者是由于恐惧而进入该国的,但这两个群体在他们抵达时各自时期的法律地位是不确定的。根据法律和道德标准,这两个群体都应该有机会说明他们抵达背后的真相,并证明他们的法律地位。第二部分认为,对寻求庇护者的拘留反映了对羚羊俘虏的隔离,将被拘留者与最有能力帮助他们形成有说服力的叙述真相的人隔离开来。拘留压制了重要的声音,加剧了无效的代理,损害了公众的认知,并最终损害了案件的结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Distant Voices Then and Now: The Impact of Isolation on the Courtroom Narratives of Slave Ship Captives and Asylum Seekers
Part I compares the nineteenth century cases of the Antelope and the Amistad to identify why they resulted in different outcomes despite having similar fact patterns. The Antelope concerned the fate of approximately 280 African captives discovered on a slave trade ship upon its interception by a U.S. revenue cutter. Since the slave trade in the United States was illegal at the time, the captives were transported to Savannah for trial through which their status—free or slave—would be determined. After a lengthy trial and appeals process in which Spain and Portugal laid claim to the captives, the Supreme Court determined that those captives claimed by a non-U.S. nation were slaves. The Court reasons that however “abhorrent” the slave trade was, the United States was obligated to recognize the rights of other nations to participate in it. In comparison, the Amistad concerned the fate of captives aboard a slave trade ship in which the captives committed mutiny, attempted to sail to Africa, but were captured by a U.S. vessel. The Supreme Court ordered them free despite the Spanish government’s claim that the captives were its property. Part I explores these different outcomes and argues that the absence of Antelope captives’ stories in the litigation process was partly due to the decision to isolate captives in slavery before their status was determined. In particular, it argues that this isolation affected the outcome of the Antelope by preventing captives from sharing their anecdotes and translating them to a format that would resonate with their legal counsel, the public, and judges. In contrast, the Amistad captives, while also detained, were situated close to those who could help them. They were able to transform their truths into a winning narrative for the court by understanding and leveraging the talents and expertise of counsel, and the biases of judges and the public. Part II argues that 200 years later, a similar environment of isolation suppresses the stories of another group with undetermined legal status: asylum seekers. Although slave ship captives were forced into the country with chains, while asylum seekers are driven into the country by fear, the legal status of both groups in their respective time periods was undetermined upon their arrival. Both groups deserved, by legal and moral standards, the opportunity to present the truth behind their arrival and to prove their legal status. Part II argues that the detention of asylum seekers mirrors the isolation of the Antelope captives by removing detainees from those most able to help them develop a persuasive narrative truth. Detention silences important voices, aggravates ineffective representation, damages public perception, and ultimately harms case outcomes.
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