Criminal Law and Cultural Diversity
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 15 May 2014
- ISBN 9780199676590
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages224 pages
- Size 239x163x20 mm
- Weight 486 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
What place, if any, ought cultural considerations have when we blame and punish in the criminal law? Bringing together political and legal theorists Criminal Law and Cultural Diversity offers original and diverse discussions that go to the heart of both legal and political debates about multiculturalism, human agency, and responsibility.
MoreLong description:
The idea of a cultural defense in criminal law is often ridiculed as "multiculturalism run amok ". To allow someone charged with a crime to say "this is my culture " as an excuse for their action seems to open the door to cultural relativism, to jeopardize the protection of fundamental rights, and to undermine norms of individual responsibility. Many scholars, however, insist that cultural evidence is appropriate, indeed essential, for the fair operation of the criminal law. The criminal law is society's most powerful tool for regulating behaviour, and just for that reason we apply strong safeguards to ensure that criminal sanctions are applied in a fair way. When it comes to individuals, we want our rules for judging responsibility and punishment to track the actual blameworthiness of the specific individual being prosecuted for a specific action in the past. Cultural evidence may help improve our judgements of individual blameworthiness and desert; indeed, cultural evidence might even be necessary if the practice of punishing individuals is to be legitimate and equitable. According to its proponents, the use of cultural evidence when judging individual blameworthiness is a natural extension of the logic of existing criminal law doctrines regarding defences, and of the logic of current philosophical theories of responsibility and agency.
This volume brings together scholars of both criminal law and philosophy to rigorously assess these ideas. Each of the chapters addresses a different dimension of the issue, from a range of perspectives, with varying degrees of sympathy or scepticism regarding cultural defences. The result is an important and original contribution to the literature. It explores why cultural diversity raises distinctive challenges in the criminal law context, not found in other domains of the multiculturalism debate, while also exploring how this particular context raises fundamental issues of agency and responsibility that are at the heart of broader debates in legal, social and political philosophy.
Criminal Law and Cultural Diversity is an important book, and should appeal to legal and political theorists and philosophers. It fills an important gap in the field concerning the connection between criminal liability and cultural evidence. It invites us to ask some challenging questions concerning what it might mean to hold people truly responsible for crimes in the context of culturally diverse societies.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Criminal Law and Culture
Culture and Criminalization
Between Denial and Recognition: Criminal Law and Cultural Diversity
Responsibility, Morality, and Culture
Cultural Defense and the Criminal Law
Family Matters: Is there Room for 'Culture' in the Courtroom?
The Cultural Defense: Reflections in Light of the Model Penal Code and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act
What Do We Have to Fear from the Cultural Defense?