Maria Virginia G. Aguilar, Allen Cassey S. Gumiran
{"title":"ON LOWERING THE AGE OF CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY: PERSPECTIVES FROM PHILIPPINE LOCAL GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS","authors":"Maria Virginia G. Aguilar, Allen Cassey S. Gumiran","doi":"10.51200/jbimpeagard.v6i1.3116","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The proposal to amend the minimum age of criminal responsibility has elicited polarized reactions in the Philippines. On one side are the politicians led by President Duterte, who are behind a bill lowering the age of criminal responsibility from 15 to 9 for two reasons: school-age thieves and drug-runners must be “taught responsibility” and that the Juvenile Justice and Welfare Law is “soft” in dealing with children in conflict with the law (CICL). On the other side are human rights advocates vehemently opposing the bill on the ground that studies in the social sciences link emotional and mental immaturity to youth offending, not to mention the Philippines’ binding commitment to protect children’s rights when it signed the Convention on the Rights of the Child. At the forefront, are the barangay officials, the first authorities encountered by the CICL upon apprehension, where the crucial decision is made: amicable settlement or State involvement. A survey among 30 barangay officials reveals that punishment is favored to deter re-offense. The lack of parental supervision is perceived as the root cause, but it is this same negligence that convinces them that handling the CICL should be a national affair, hence, their approval for lowering the minimum age of criminal responsibility, and the children’s subsequent detention in government facilities. This study recommends that barangay officials be re-oriented regarding the aptness of rehabilitation for the CICL, particularly the framings of discourses from the social sciences, while also advancing a critique of the justice system itself critically through a Gramscian lens.","PeriodicalId":304648,"journal":{"name":"Journal of BIMP-EAGA Regional Development","volume":"25 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-12-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of BIMP-EAGA Regional Development","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.51200/jbimpeagard.v6i1.3116","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The proposal to amend the minimum age of criminal responsibility has elicited polarized reactions in the Philippines. On one side are the politicians led by President Duterte, who are behind a bill lowering the age of criminal responsibility from 15 to 9 for two reasons: school-age thieves and drug-runners must be “taught responsibility” and that the Juvenile Justice and Welfare Law is “soft” in dealing with children in conflict with the law (CICL). On the other side are human rights advocates vehemently opposing the bill on the ground that studies in the social sciences link emotional and mental immaturity to youth offending, not to mention the Philippines’ binding commitment to protect children’s rights when it signed the Convention on the Rights of the Child. At the forefront, are the barangay officials, the first authorities encountered by the CICL upon apprehension, where the crucial decision is made: amicable settlement or State involvement. A survey among 30 barangay officials reveals that punishment is favored to deter re-offense. The lack of parental supervision is perceived as the root cause, but it is this same negligence that convinces them that handling the CICL should be a national affair, hence, their approval for lowering the minimum age of criminal responsibility, and the children’s subsequent detention in government facilities. This study recommends that barangay officials be re-oriented regarding the aptness of rehabilitation for the CICL, particularly the framings of discourses from the social sciences, while also advancing a critique of the justice system itself critically through a Gramscian lens.
修改最低刑事责任年龄的提议在菲律宾引起了两极分化的反应。一边是以杜特尔特总统为首的政客,他们支持一项将刑事责任年龄从15岁降至9岁的法案,原因有二:学龄小偷和毒贩必须被“教导责任”,以及《少年司法和福利法》在处理违法儿童方面“软弱”(CICL)。另一方面,人权倡导者强烈反对该法案,理由是社会科学研究将情感和精神不成熟与青少年犯罪联系起来,更不用说菲律宾在签署《儿童权利公约》(Convention On the rights of the Child)时保护儿童权利的约束性承诺。站在最前面的是村官员,他们是CICL在被捕后遇到的第一批当局,在那里作出关键决定:友好解决还是国家介入。一项针对30名村官的调查显示,惩罚倾向于阻止再次犯罪。缺乏父母的监督被认为是根本原因,但正是这种疏忽使他们相信处理CICL应该是国家事务,因此他们批准降低最低刑事责任年龄,并随后将儿童拘留在政府设施中。本研究建议,对于CICL的康复能力,特别是社会科学的话语框架,村官应该重新定位,同时也通过葛兰西的视角对司法系统本身进行批判性的批评。