双重刑罚帝国:巴勒斯坦/以色列及其他地区的紧急权力和军事法庭

IF 2.3 1区 社会学 Q1 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Smadar Ben-Natan
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引用次数: 7

摘要

本文探讨了帝国新旧形态中紧急权力和刑法的双重性。以美国“反恐战争”为背景,我将围绕当前帝国和“敌方战斗人员”待遇的讨论联系起来,揭示了帝国、紧急情况和“敌方刑罚学”之间的新联系,我探索了从大英帝国晚期到当代以色列/巴勒斯坦作为“帝国形态”的紧急权力和刑法所造成的双重性。通过紧急立法、军事法庭的谱系和20世纪80年代以色列的两个案例研究,我展示了紧急权力是如何构成一种刑罚制度的,它通过在明显的排斥性和惩罚性合法性下起诉种族化的敌人人口来补充普通刑法。在Markus Dubber的《双重刑罚国家》的基础上,我展示了这个公开不自由的双重刑罚帝国是如何(I)镇压政治抵抗(叛乱、叛乱和恐怖主义)和(ii)通过紧急法令和军事法庭将敌人刑罚制度化的。因此,在以色列和美国等否认其非自由特征的帝国组织中,紧急权力被视为预防性安全,并被视为刑罚体系的一部分,而敌人刑罚学则在众目睽睽之下运作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The dual penal empire: Emergency powers and military courts in Palestine/Israel and beyond
This article explores the duality of emergency powers and criminal law in old and new formations of empire. Set against the backdrop of the US “war on terror,” I link discussions around current articulations of empire and the treatment of “enemy combatants,” illuminating new connections between empire, emergency, and “enemy penology.” Focusing on Palestine/Israel, I explore the duality created by emergency powers and criminal law from the late British Empire to contemporary Israel/Palestine as an “imperial formation.” Through a genealogy of emergency legislation, military courts, and two case studies from the 1980s Israel, I show how emergency powers constitute a penal regime that complements ordinary criminal law through prosecutions of racialized enemy populations under a distinct exclusionary and punitive legality. Building on Markus Dubber's Dual Penal State, I demonstrate how the—openly illiberal—dual penal empire (i) suppresses political resistance (insurgency, rebellion, and terrorism) and (ii) institutionalizes enemy penology through emergency statutes and military courts. Thus, in imperial formations, such as Israel and the US—which deny their illiberal features—emergency powers are framed as preventive security and denied as part of the penal system, while enemy penology operates in plain sight.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
12.50%
发文量
60
期刊介绍: Punishment & Society is an international, interdisciplinary, peer reviewed journal that publishes the highest quality original research and scholarship dealing with punishment, penal institutions and penal control.
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