Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Punishing Noncitizens
View through CrossRef
AbstractIn this article, I discuss a distinctively nonparadigmatic instance of punishment: the punishment of noncitizens. I shall argue that the punishment of noncitizens presents considerable difficulties for one currently popular account of criminal punishment: Antony Duff’s communicative expressive theory of punishment. Duff presents his theory explicitly as an account of the punishment of citizens – and as I shall argue, this is not merely an incidental feature of his account. However, it is plausible that a general account of the criminal law of the kind of idealized state that Duff focusses on will need to say something about how that law deals with noncitizens. In particular, I claim, it will need to provide a justification for punishing them. Because Duff's account says nothing about the punishment of noncitizens, it cannot do so. Furthermore, although Duff's more recent suggestion that noncitizens should be thought of as being guests in the state on whose territory they are present may provide for an account of their criminalization, it cannot easily be extended into an account that provides a justification for their punishment.
Title: Punishing Noncitizens
Description:
AbstractIn this article, I discuss a distinctively nonparadigmatic instance of punishment: the punishment of noncitizens.
I shall argue that the punishment of noncitizens presents considerable difficulties for one currently popular account of criminal punishment: Antony Duff’s communicative expressive theory of punishment.
Duff presents his theory explicitly as an account of the punishment of citizens – and as I shall argue, this is not merely an incidental feature of his account.
However, it is plausible that a general account of the criminal law of the kind of idealized state that Duff focusses on will need to say something about how that law deals with noncitizens.
In particular, I claim, it will need to provide a justification for punishing them.
Because Duff's account says nothing about the punishment of noncitizens, it cannot do so.
Furthermore, although Duff's more recent suggestion that noncitizens should be thought of as being guests in the state on whose territory they are present may provide for an account of their criminalization, it cannot easily be extended into an account that provides a justification for their punishment.
Related Results
Native Nations, Noncitizens, and the Supremacy Clause
Native Nations, Noncitizens, and the Supremacy Clause
<div>
Native Nations and noncitizens have often prevailed in the face of adverse state action by asserting treaty rights, arguing that state actions are preempted by federal...
Interrogating the operation of empathy in social work with noncitizens
Interrogating the operation of empathy in social work with noncitizens
<p>Based on interviews I conducted with social workers in Canada, this article offers a critique of empathy as a foundation of good social work. More specifically, I examine ...
Interrogating the operation of empathy in social work with noncitizens
Interrogating the operation of empathy in social work with noncitizens
<p>Based on interviews I conducted with social workers in Canada, this article offers a critique of empathy as a foundation of good social work. More specifically, I examine ...
Punishing Mobility in Europe
Punishing Mobility in Europe
Abstract
Understanding and analyzing the punishment of mobility in Europe entails looking at the interconnectedness of the European scale and the national scale o...
Accessing information during the COVID-19 pandemic era: a study of GCC citizens and noncitizens
Accessing information during the COVID-19 pandemic era: a study of GCC citizens and noncitizens
Purpose
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a new disease that has led to rapid and dramatic global changes. This study aims to investigate how Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) ci...
The Impact of COVID-19 on Immigration Detention
The Impact of COVID-19 on Immigration Detention
COVID-19 has spread quickly through immigration detention facilities in the United States. As of December 2, 2020, there have been over 7,500 confirmed COVID-19 cases among detaine...
Citizenship
Citizenship
At its most fundamental, citizenship means political belonging, and to study citizenship is to study how we live with others in a political community. Anthropological work on the t...
"Guest" Speakers: Immigration Enforcement and First Amendment Exceptionalism
"Guest" Speakers: Immigration Enforcement and First Amendment Exceptionalism
Whether and, if so, to what extent noncitizens in the U.S. enjoy First Amendment rights are questions the Supreme Court has not definitively answered. The Trump Administration's im...

