惩罚仇恨和偏见

IF 4.9 1区 社会学 Q1 Social Sciences
Heidi M. Hurd, M. Moore
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引用次数: 35

摘要

这篇文章详细分析了国家和国际上急于制定和实施仇恨和偏见犯罪立法的理由,作为对种族仇恨、偏执、同性恋恐惧症和厌女症的悲剧性野蛮表达的回应,这些继续提醒西方世界,它无力保护其公民免受那些不分享其平等主义理想的人的伤害。在开展这个项目时,我们试图综合和批判性地评估十多年来关于仇恨和偏见犯罪立法所施加的加强惩罚的智慧的学术价值。我们进一步试图证明,可悲的是,迄今为止,这些文献未能为这种政治上流行的国家行动形式提供充分的道德理由和可接受的理论框架。文章分为四个部分,对应于过去十年或更长时间里进步的仇恨/偏见犯罪立法的四个主要理由。第一部分考虑了“不法行为理论”——声称由群体仇恨或偏见驱动的罪犯所造成的伤害比那些出于不同动机犯下同样罪行的被告所犯的罪行更严重。我们研究了一份广泛的伤害目录,这些伤害通常被认为与仇恨和偏见动机的犯罪有独特的联系:对主要受害者的身体和精神伤害加重;主要受害者社区内普遍存在恐惧;对法律体系的信心减弱,以及与之相关的更大社会秩序的不稳定;受害者及其社区的自卫报复行为;通过此类犯罪行为发布有害信息,败坏道德秩序;每当政府未能在法律上表达这种“言论”所适当煽动的道德愤怒时,相关的、但独立的损害就会成为同谋。正如我们所证明的那样,即使社会科学最终证明了那些提出各种不法行为论点的人所提出的经验主张是正确的,也存在一些概念和道德问题,使这些论点无法证明现有的仇恨和偏见犯罪立法所施加的全面判刑是合理的。第二部分讨论了我们所说的“表现主义论点”的不同版本——这个论点认为,通过群体仇恨和偏见的行为来表达对社区的不尊重,适当地招致国家以加重刑事处罚的形式的谴责。正如我们所论证的,要么表现主义的论点与错误的论点是多余的,因此引发了第一部分所阐述的问题;或者它依赖于一种独立的表现主义惩罚理论,因此,它是不可持续的。第三部分考虑了我们所说的“罪责论”——这个理论认为,仇恨和偏见构成了独特的罪责心理状态,因此比其他形式的邪恶更严厉的惩罚是合理的。在这一部分中,我们证明,如果仇恨和偏见被解释为罪责标准,那么仇恨/偏见犯罪是一种新的理论发明,它更适合以政治完美主义为理由的基于性格的刑法理论,而不是与经典政治自由主义更和谐的基于行为的理论。最后,第四部分讨论了“平等命题”——该命题认为,加强对仇恨/偏见犯罪的惩罚适当地发挥作用,以实现我们社会中犯罪风险的更平等的分配,因为它们阻止了已经承受了不成比例的社会暴力的公民群体(进一步)受害。正如我们所证明的,这一主张的每一种意义都使其在概念上不连贯或在道德上站不住脚,因此,它不能作为我们在第一、二、三部分中研究的仇恨/偏见犯罪立法理论的有希望的替代方案。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Punishing Hatred and Prejudice
This article undertakes a detailed examination of the justifications advanced for the national and international rush to enact and apply hate and bias crime legislation as an answer to the tragically brutal expressions of racial animosity, bigotry, homophobia, and misogyny that continue to remind the Western World of its inability to protect its citizens from those who do not share its egalitarian ideals. In undertaking this project, we seek to synthesize and critically evaluate over a decade's worth of scholarship on the wisdom of the enhanced penalties imposed by hate and bias crime legislation. We further seek to demonstrate that this literature, to date, has sadly failed to provide both an adequate moral justification and an acceptable doctrinal framework for this politically popular form of state action. The article is divided into four parts, corresponding to the four principal rationales for hate/bias crime legislation that have advanced over the past decade or more. Part I considers the "wrongdoing thesis" - the claim that the harms perpetrated by offenders who are motivated by group-hatred or prejudice represent wrongs more serious than those perpetrated by defendants who commit the same offenses with different motivations. We work through an extensive catalogue of harms that are commonly claimed to be uniquely associated with hate- and bias-motivated crimes: elevated physical and psychic injuries to principal victims; wide-spread fear within the principal victim's community; a diminished faith in the legal system and an associated instability within the larger social order; vigilante acts of retaliation by victims and their communities; the publication by such criminal acts of harmful messages corruptive of the moral order; and the associated, but independent harm of the state being complicit whenever it fails to express in law the moral outrage that such "statements" properly incite. As we demonstrate, even if social science ultimately vindicates the empirical claims made by those who propound the various wrongdoing theses, there are conceptual and moral problems that prevent these arguments from justifying the blanket sentence enhancements imposed by existing hate and bias crime legislation. Part II takes up different versions of what we call the "expressivist thesis" - the thesis that the disrespect for communities expressed by acts of group-hatred and prejudice properly invite denunciation by the state in the form of elevated criminal penalties. As we argue, either the expressivist thesis is redundant with the wrongdoing thesis, and so invites the problems articulated in Part I; or it depends upon a free-standing expressivist theory of punishment, and is, for that reason, unsustainable. Part III considers what we call the "culpability thesis" - the thesis that hate and prejudice constitute uniquely culpable mental states that justify penalties more severe than are meted out for other forms of viciousness. We demonstrate in this Part that if hate and bias are construed as culpability criteria, then hate/bias crimes are novel doctrinal inventions that are more at home within character-based theories of the criminal law that are best justified by political perfectionism, as opposed to act-based theories that are more in harmony with classic political liberalism. Finally, Part IV takes up the "equality thesis" - the thesis that the enhanced penalties of hate/bias crimes properly function to achieve a more egalitarian distribution of the risk of crime within our society, because they deter the (further) victimization of groups of citizens who already bear a disproportionate amount of our society's violence. As we demonstrate, each of the various senses that can be ascribed to this claim render it either conceptually incoherent or morally indefensible, and as such, it fails to function as a promising alternative to the theories of hate/bias crime legislation that we examine in Parts I, II and III.
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