指挥责任是如何变得如此复杂的:一个罪责矛盾,它的混淆,和一个简单的解决方案

IF 1 Q2 LAW
Darryl Robinson
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引用次数: 36

摘要

关于指挥责任的文献非常广泛,而且正迅速变得更加复杂。在本文中,我认为命令责任可以比看起来简单得多。我专注于一个谜题,一个隐藏在眼前的谜题。令人困惑的是,法庭的判例使用命令责任对没有因果关系的人定罪,同时也承认需要因果关系的罪责原则。这一鲜明的矛盾被法理学和话语中的许多争论所掩盖。的确,许多读者会提出许多论点来否认我刚才描述的矛盾。我将详细分析主要论点,以证明这种矛盾确实存在。我认为,法庭的判例在得出“未能惩罚”指挥责任部门与捐款要求不可调和的结论时,早就犯了一个错误。这导致了对因果关系的否定。随后否认、避免或解决与罪责原则相矛盾的努力催生了许多关于指挥责任的不一致、复杂和令人费解的主张。这些包括将指挥责任描述为“自成一体”,混合的,多样化的,为行为负责但不为行为负责,既非模式不犯罪,也非模式有时犯罪。然而,如果我们回顾第一个错误,一个简单而优雅的解决方案是可用的。指挥责任是附属责任的一种模式,需要因果贡献。笔者借鉴刑法理论的研究成果,对出资条件的参数进行了探讨。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How Command Responsibility Got So Complicated: A Culpability Contradiction, Its Obfuscation, and a Simple Solution
The literature on command responsibility is extensive and is rapidly growing more complex. In this article, I argue that command responsibility can be much simpler than it seems.I focus on a single puzzle, a puzzle hidden in plain sight. The puzzle is that the Tribunal jurisprudence uses command responsibility to convict persons without causal contribution to the crime, while also recognizing a culpability principle that requires causal contribution. This stark contradiction has been obscured by many arguments in the jurisprudence and discourse. Indeed, many readers will raise a host of arguments to deny the contradiction I just described. I will dissect the major arguments to demonstrate that the contradiction does indeed exist. I argue that Tribunal jurisprudence took an early wrong turn in concluding that the “failure to punish” branch of command responsibility is irreconcilable with a contribution requirement. This led to a rejection of causal contribution. Subsequent efforts to deny, avoid or resolve the resulting contradiction with the culpability principle have spawned many inconsistent, complex and convoluted claims about command responsibility. These include the descriptions of command responsibility as ‘sui generis’, as hybrid, as variegated, as responsibility for-the-acts-but-not-for-the-acts, as neither-mode-nor-offence or as sometimes-mode-sometimes-offence. However, if we revisit the first misstep, a simple and elegant solution is available. Command responsibility is a mode of accessory liability and requires causal contribution. I draw on scholarship from criminal law theory to explore the parameters of the contribution requirement.
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