Cultural defense, hate crimes and equality before the law

The so-called “cultural defense” before the courts, which seeks full or partial exculpation based on the cultural identity of either the defendant or the plaintiff, and the newly established category of “hate crimes”, which enhances the criminal sentences in cases in which the criminal acts from mot...

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Main Author: Jean-Christophe Merle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina 2006-01-01
Series:Ethic@: an International Journal for Moral Philosophy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/ethic/article/view/17299
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spelling doaj-5ac2801256674551b671ad96bac1f2062021-03-02T09:40:32ZengUniversidade Federal de Santa CatarinaEthic@: an International Journal for Moral Philosophy1677-29542006-01-015171913893Cultural defense, hate crimes and equality before the lawJean-Christophe Merle0Universität des Saarlandes, AlemanhaThe so-called “cultural defense” before the courts, which seeks full or partial exculpation based on the cultural identity of either the defendant or the plaintiff, and the newly established category of “hate crimes”, which enhances the criminal sentences in cases in which the criminal acts from motives of prejudice, are two examples – tending in opposite directions – for culturally based exceptions to the principle of equal enforcement of the law, the intent of which is to treat everybody as an equal. The justification for these departures from equal enforcement is that the law is allegedly biased infavor of the cultural majority within the population. However, if one accepts this claim, one should (i) complement these measures by creating a consistent set of rights and duties for the cultural communities, (ii) limit these rights and duties to a merely legal, not comprehensive culture, (iii) subject it to legislative review and (iv) define clear legal relationships between the cultural communities. The “personal status” of traditional as well as of new cultural communities (both with membership on a voluntary basis and under the respect of Mill’s “no harm principle”) may provide us with elementsof a real equal treatment of individuals belonging to different cultures.https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/ethic/article/view/17299Multicultural societyCultural biasEquality before the lawProtection of cultural minorities
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jean-Christophe Merle
spellingShingle Jean-Christophe Merle
Cultural defense, hate crimes and equality before the law
Ethic@: an International Journal for Moral Philosophy
Multicultural society
Cultural bias
Equality before the law
Protection of cultural minorities
author_facet Jean-Christophe Merle
author_sort Jean-Christophe Merle
title Cultural defense, hate crimes and equality before the law
title_short Cultural defense, hate crimes and equality before the law
title_full Cultural defense, hate crimes and equality before the law
title_fullStr Cultural defense, hate crimes and equality before the law
title_full_unstemmed Cultural defense, hate crimes and equality before the law
title_sort cultural defense, hate crimes and equality before the law
publisher Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina
series Ethic@: an International Journal for Moral Philosophy
issn 1677-2954
publishDate 2006-01-01
description The so-called “cultural defense” before the courts, which seeks full or partial exculpation based on the cultural identity of either the defendant or the plaintiff, and the newly established category of “hate crimes”, which enhances the criminal sentences in cases in which the criminal acts from motives of prejudice, are two examples – tending in opposite directions – for culturally based exceptions to the principle of equal enforcement of the law, the intent of which is to treat everybody as an equal. The justification for these departures from equal enforcement is that the law is allegedly biased infavor of the cultural majority within the population. However, if one accepts this claim, one should (i) complement these measures by creating a consistent set of rights and duties for the cultural communities, (ii) limit these rights and duties to a merely legal, not comprehensive culture, (iii) subject it to legislative review and (iv) define clear legal relationships between the cultural communities. The “personal status” of traditional as well as of new cultural communities (both with membership on a voluntary basis and under the respect of Mill’s “no harm principle”) may provide us with elementsof a real equal treatment of individuals belonging to different cultures.
topic Multicultural society
Cultural bias
Equality before the law
Protection of cultural minorities
url https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/ethic/article/view/17299
work_keys_str_mv AT jeanchristophemerle culturaldefensehatecrimesandequalitybeforethelaw
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