Killing in the Name Of? Capital Punishment in Colonial and Postcolonial India

IF 0.8 3区 社会学 Q1 HISTORY Law and History Review Pub Date : 2022-10-07 DOI:10.1017/S0738248022000335
A. McClure
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Abstract

Unlike whipping, which was quickly abolished following independence, India has continued to hold tightly to the noose’s rope and remains a retentionist country to our present day. Notably, though the number of executions would fall dramatically in the first decades of India’s postcolonial history, the list of crimes made punishable by death has grown ever longer in recent years. Rather than positing the continued presence of the death penalty as an anachronism ill-suited for a modern democracy, this article takes seriously the legal and discursive developments that allowed the most infamous of penal institutions to travel safely across India’s twentieth century. From something that begun as a distilled expression of racialised colonial state power, like many other state institutions during this period, the death penalty would undergo a series of changes to remain relevant amidst new organizing political principles of representative democracy and popular will. Moving from the first formal efforts at abolition in the 1920s, through constitutional assembly debates in the 1940s, and Supreme Court judgements between 1967-83, the article positions capital punishment as a product of both deep colonial inheritances, and a particular process of postcolonial translation. Becoming fully couched in the language of popular sentiment by the culmination of this legal transformation, this violence would become well-positioned to grow within a national political culture increasingly organised around majoritarian expressions of national belonging.
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以…的名义杀人?印度殖民地和后殖民地的死刑
与独立后迅速废除的鞭刑不同,印度继续紧紧抓住套索,直到今天仍然是一个保留鞭刑的国家。值得注意的是,尽管在印度后殖民历史的头几十年,处决人数会大幅下降,但近年来,可判处死刑的罪行清单却越来越长。本文没有将死刑的持续存在视为不适合现代民主的时代错误,而是认真对待法律和话语的发展,这些发展使最臭名昭著的刑罚机构得以安全地穿越印度的二十世纪。与这一时期的许多其他国家机构一样,死刑最初是对种族化殖民国家权力的提炼表达,死刑将经历一系列变化,以在代议制民主和民意的新组织政治原则中保持相关性。从20世纪20年代第一次正式废除死刑,到20世纪40年代的制宪会议辩论,再到1967-83年的最高法院判决,这篇文章将死刑定位为深刻的殖民继承和后殖民翻译的特定过程的产物。随着这场法律变革的高潮,这种暴力将完全用大众情绪的语言表达出来,在一种日益围绕多数人表达国家归属感而组织起来的国家政治文化中,这种暴力行为将很好地发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
12.50%
发文量
42
期刊介绍: Law and History Review (LHR), America"s leading legal history journal, encompasses American, European, and ancient legal history issues. The journal"s purpose is to further research in the fields of the social history of law and the history of legal ideas and institutions. LHR features articles, essays, commentaries by international authorities, and reviews of important books on legal history. American Society for Legal History
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