将仇恨犯罪联邦化:象征政治、表达法还是刑事执法工具?

IF 1.6 3区 社会学 Q1 LAW
Sara Sun Beale
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引用次数: 19

摘要

本文探讨了当前修改联邦法律以建立广泛的新联邦仇恨犯罪的建议所提出的一些政策问题。近年来,这项提案在参议院获得了两次通过,似乎在众议院也得到了大力支持。本文将其他学者讨论过的几个严肃问题(联邦管辖权的宪法基础和对带有偏见的犯罪单独实施惩罚的明智性)放在一边,以便关注当前提案的另一个特点。该提案并没有创造一项联邦官员打算积极起诉的新联邦罪行,而是将创造一项新的联邦罪行,主要作为一种传递象征性信息的手段,并为联邦政府为州和地方的努力提供幕后援助的伙伴关系提供法律基础。强调象征意义和努力建立一个持续的联邦-州合作伙伴关系都产生了一些问题,这些问题在关于联邦仇恨犯罪立法的辩论中基本上被忽视了。本文探讨了符号政治和利益集团理论的政治学文献,得出的结论是,它们为仇恨犯罪立法提供了一种可能的解释,这种立法唤起了强烈的情绪,并为关键利益集团提供了象征性的保证,尽管它对执法的影响很小。强调联邦刑法的表达功能有可能改变公众的看法,尽管尚不清楚这一过程将如何发挥作用。控制一种新罪行的执行的技术比控制这种法律的社会意义的技术更容易理解。它可能创造和加强有价值的规范,并带来社会资本的理想转变,但它也可能破坏刑法的道德力量。象征主义或表达功能的孤立也改变了联邦立法过程的动态,以及相关的公共辩论。该提案的另一方面是试图建立一种永久的伙伴关系,在这种伙伴关系中,联邦、州和地方官员以特别工作组的模式共同调查和起诉仇恨犯罪。特别工作组以有效的方式利用资源,但它打破了独立主权国家各自执行自己法律的宪法形象,并朝着将目前自治的警察和检察机构整合到每个国家内部分散的刑事司法系统中迈出了一步。最后,从成千上万的案件中选择罕见的联邦起诉,这一深思熟虑的策略使检察官能够讨论和否定体现州政策的州法律,使少数被告面临不同的程序法和实体法,以及不同的判决,而不是犯下同样行为的所有其他人。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Federalizing Hate Crimes: Symbolic Politics, Expressive Law, or Tool for Criminal Enforcement?
This article explores some of the policy issues raised by current proposals to amend federal law to create a broad new federal hate crime. This proposal has passed the Senate twice in recent years, and appears to have substantial support in the House as well. This article lays to one side several serious issues dealt with by other scholars (the constitutional basis for federal jurisdiction and the wisdom of enacting separate penalties for bias-motivated crimes), in order to focus on another feature of the current proposal. Instead of creating a new federal offense that federal officials intend to prosecute aggressively, the proposal would create a new federal offense primarily as a means of sending a symbolic message and providing a legal basis for a partnership in which the federal government provides behind the scenes assistance to state and local efforts. Both the emphasis on symbolism and the effort to create a continuing federal-state partnership create issues that have been largely ignored in the debate over federal hate crimes legislation. This article explores the political science literature on symbolic politics and interest group theory, concluding that they provide one possible explanation for hate crime legislation that evokes intense emotions and provides symbolic reassurance to key interest groups, though it would have little impact on law enforcement. Emphasis on the expressive function of federal criminal law has the potential to alter public perceptions, though it is not clear how that process will play out. The techniques for controlling the enforcement of a new crime are better understood than those for controlling the social meaning of such a law. It may create and strengthen valuable norms and bring about desirable shifts in social capital, but it might also undermine the moral force of the criminal law. The isolation of the symbolism or expressive function also changes the dynamic of the federal legislative process, and the related public debates. The other side of the proposal is the attempt to create a permanent partnership in which federal, state, and local officials work together to investigate and prosecute hate crimes in a task force model. The task force brings to bear resources in an efficient manner, but it strains the constitutional image of separate sovereigns each enforcing their own laws and takes a step towards the integration of the current autonomous police and prosecutorial agencies in the fragmented criminal justice systems within each state. Finally, the deliberate strategy of bringing rare federal prosecutions selected from among thousands of cases allows prosecutors to forum shop and negate state laws that embody state policies, exposing a few defendants to different procedural and substantive laws, and different sentences, than all others who have committed the same conduct.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
5.90%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Boston University Law Review provides analysis and commentary on all areas of the law. Published six times a year, the Law Review contains articles contributed by law professors and practicing attorneys from all over the world, along with notes written by student members.
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