在自由社会中监管少数族裔的挑战

IF 2.9 1区 哲学 Q1 ETHICS Journal of Political Philosophy Pub Date : 2023-10-15 DOI:10.1111/jopp.12313
Joseph Heath
{"title":"在自由社会中监管少数族裔的挑战","authors":"Joseph Heath","doi":"10.1111/jopp.12313","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The problem with police is not that they are fascist pigs but that our country is ruled by majoritarian pigs. Ta-Nehisi Coates To change the police without changing the police role in society is as futile as the labors of Sisyphus. John van Maanen This question is, I will argue, of considerable importance to political philosophy, because it exposes a tension in the liberal project as a whole. It has, unfortunately, been subject to relative neglect; there has until recently been very little philosophical or normative literature on policing, much less the policing of minorities.3 There are two reasons for this, both of them based ultimately on the perception that the problem is theoretically straightforward, and so does not raise any philosophically difficult questions.4 With respect to policing in general, many political philosophers appear to believe that the police are uninteresting, because they serve the purely instrumental role of enforcing statutory law. And with respect to minorities, widespread acceptance of the fascist pig theory leads to the perception that the problem is also normatively straightforward. If tensions between police and minorities are caused by the police being racist, then the solution is obviously for the police to become less racist. These two views, when combined, generate a highly simplistic account of the problem of policing minorities.5 It suggests that, since the police are there to enforce the law, all they need to do is enforce the law in a non-discriminatory way, treating all citizens equally, and the problem should go away. The argument, however, rests on a false premise, since the police do a great deal more than simply enforce the law, and it is primarily these other activities that give rise to problems. My preliminary contention in this article will be that both of the underlying theories about policing are false or misleading. Obviously, the police do enforce the law, but as several decades of work in the sociology of policing have shown, this is not all that they do, and, indeed, this does not even add up to a substantial fraction of what they do. And equally obviously, there are some police who are racist, both consciously and subconsciously, but this goes only part of the way to explaining the seriousness of the difficulties that practically every major police force experiences in its relations with particular minority groups.6 Indeed, a great deal of the motivation for the shift in emphasis toward “systemic racism” in expert discourse on the subject lies in the recognition that the emphasis on eliminating attitudinal racism or increasing officer diversity has reached the point of sharply diminishing returns in many jurisdictions.7 In order to understand the broader source of the problem, I will argue, it is necessary to see that effective policing is inherently communitarian. The result is that minority groups who are unable to implement a self-policing regime find themselves subject to coercive enforcement of social norms and standards of respectability that reflect parochial aspects of the majority culture, which they often resist. I refer to this, referencing Ta-Nehisi Coates, as the “majoritarian pigs” theory of oppressive policing.8 Liberalism, to the extent that it imposes a neutrality constraint only on statutory law, is powerless to remedy this problem directly, which is why the policing of minorities poses a fundamental challenge in liberal societies. To put the claim in highly condensed form: even when the state is liberal, society is not, and the police, in order to be effective, are obliged to meet society half-way.9 The article proceeds as follows. I begin by distinguishing two very different normative models of policing, which follow from different views about the basis of police authority. The first view, which I refer to as the legalist model of policing, rests on the claim that police power should be limited to law enforcement, narrowly construed (which is to say, preventing crimes in progress and apprehending those who have broken the law). In contrast to this, I will describe what I refer to as the communitarian model of policing, which regards the organized enforcement of statutory law as deeply intertwined with enforcement of the informal social order. The authority of the police, on this view, extends beyond the enforcement of law to include a wide range of interventions aimed at complementing the efforts of communities to maintain order. The communitarian model, as a reconstruction of policing best practice, is what underlies the widespread call for more “community policing” as a response to various ailments.10 It is not difficult to see, however, that this practice creates a number of normative difficulties in a pluralistic society. The central tension arises from the desire on the part of the liberal state to exercise a monopoly on the legitimate use of force while simultaneously enacting only laws that meet a fairly restrictive standard of justification. The consequence is that the police are subject to constant demands from the public for interventions that extend far beyond the ambit of law. In principle, this tension could be dissolved by adopting a legalist approach and restricting the activities of the police to law enforcement narrowly construed. I will therefore round out the argument by outlining several reasons why I think this would be neither desirable nor realistic. I unfortunately do not have any simple solutions to propose to the underlying dilemma. I do, however, think that a deeper understanding of the difficulty of the problem is important. Policing has been the subject of a great deal of debate in recent years, which has unfortunately exposed significant misunderstanding of policing as an institution, not just in the public at large, but among many academic commentators as well.11 This has many effects, one of which is to reinforce the pre-existing tendency among the police to see themselves as an embattled and misunderstood minority, which in turn provides them with grounds to dismiss normative demands made upon them. The first step toward amelioration of the situation must involve a proper understanding of the difficulty of the problem and the extent to which police are being subjected to contradictory demands. When sociologists first began to take an active interest in studying the police, in the late 1960s, they quickly acquired the Socratic wisdom—they came to realize that they didn't really understand what the police do most of the time, or why it is the police that are doing it. In particular, they discovered that statutory law enforcement constitutes a vanishingly small fraction of what the average patrol officer spends most of the day doing.12 Yet despite this puzzlement over what the police do, there was never any doubt about the distinctive characteristic of their institutional role, which is that they are agents of the state who are authorized to use force.13 It is also generally accepted within modern liberal societies that this authorization to use force is grounded in, or legitimated by, law—primarily criminal statutes, but also traffic and vehicle law, certain municipal and regional ordinances, and in some countries immigration law. The most common mistake, however, is to think that because the use of force by police is authorized by law, it is used only to enforce the law (or that its domain of application is limited to that of legally regulated behavior). Empirically, this is simply not the case, as police use the power that is granted to them by statutory law to pursue a range of extra-statutory objectives.14 This includes maintaining order, emergency response, protection, and rescue, and, perhaps most expansively, “brokering and enforcing social cooperation,” especially regarding the use of public space.15 This aspect of policing practice is obviously in tension with the dominant normative understanding of police power. The latter is closely tied to theories of political authority that regard the enforcement of law as the only legitimate basis for the use of force by agents of the state.16 This view follows from a number of different philosophical positions, but one can find a particularly clear version in Kantian theories of law, which draw a sharp distinction between morality and law, conceiving of the former as a system of rules that binds individuals internally, the latter a system of rules that binds them externally. To say that individuals are bound externally is to say that they are given incentives to act in conformity with the law, first and foremost through the threat of punishment in the event of noncompliance.17 Thus the use of force against individuals by agents of the state is justifiable only when it is used to secure compliance with a justifiable system of publicly promulgated laws.18 Although the police are often described informally as being responsible for “enforcing” these laws, technically punishment can only be imposed by the judiciary, and is carried out by the correctional system. The primary task of the police is to identify and apprehend individuals who are suspected of having broken the law, delivering them to the judiciary for trial. Thus the police operate at the front end of the criminal justice system, the point at which the enforcement of law is initiated. Secondary tasks then involve deterrence, which involves persuading individuals to obey the law through the threat of apprehension, and, in the rarer case, direct interdiction, which involves stopping individuals who are in the midst of committing an infraction. This way of thinking about state coercion gives rise to what can be characterized as a legalist theory of policing, on the grounds that it restricts the use of force by police to direct enforcement of the law.19 This implies that the police should have no power over the ordinary citizen, so long as the individual is not currently acting in an unlawful manner and is not suspected of having committed some other crime. It suggests that, absent some law to the contrary, individuals are under no obligation to speak to the police, to answer any questions posed, to obey their orders, or even to identify themselves, unless there is some direct connection between these actions and the investigation of criminal conduct. Individuals on this view enjoy an extremely broad sphere of liberty—such as the freedom to move at will through public space, to use offensive language or be verbally abusive toward others, perhaps even to brandish lethal weapons—so long as they have not committed any crime and are above any reasonable suspicion of having committed a crime. Public commitment to a legalist theory of policing has been encouraged by certain popular interpretations of the US Constitution, which become apparent when citizens of that country refuse to obey a direct order from a police officer, refuse to identify themselves, refuse to exit their vehicle, or refuse to circulate or disperse in public space, on the grounds that their ongoing activities are not in direct violation of any legal restriction. The situation is significantly complicated, however, by the fact that legislators in jurisdictions in which this view of police authority is widespread have often sought to undermine it by enacting extremely broad laws, which have the effect of legally prohibiting all conduct that is contrary to the will of the police. In other cases, courts have achieved the same effect by recognizing a class of “common law misdemeanors,” thus tacitly extending the criminal law.20 As a result, in some jurisdictions it is an offense to insult or show disrespect to a police officer, to fail to identify oneself, or to obstruct an investigation. Laws prohibiting loitering, vagrancy, nuisance, disorderly conduct, public mischief, and public intoxication can also be used in ways that essentially override any citizen's right to occupy public space. And finally, the offense of failing to obey a police officer—a common feature of motor vehicle law—can be extended to ordinary contexts of interaction. The result is the phenomenon of “overcriminalization,” in which the sphere of individual freedom is essentially extinguished by the legal prohibition of practically all conduct.21 But, of course, in most jurisdictions in which citizens are subject to this sort of overcriminalization, the sphere of individual freedom is seldom extinguished in practice, because the purpose of these laws is not really to prohibit the activity in question, but rather to grant police the discretion to control members of the public in response to situational exigencies. The important point, for our purposes, is that the existence of these broad prohibitions can render the legalist theory of police power trivially true. By making it the case that everyone is always breaking some law, any exercise of police power can be characterized as mere enforcement of the law. And yet the legal form clearly serves to conceal the true character of the underlying practice, which is not to arrest everyone who commits an infraction. While the police do engage in some by-the-book enforcement of statutory law, especially with respect to indictable offenses, they also use the power that is conferred upon them by statutory law to pursue other, extra-statutory objectives. They do so with the full knowledge and support of legislators, which is one of the reasons that the latter often respond to court-imposed restrictions on police power by crafting laws that expand the scope of police discretion. As we shall see, there are rival accounts of this “other objective” that police pursue, but before getting to that, it is important to consider why the legalist model of policing is not more widely embraced. Although philosophers sometimes speak of law and morality as though they were quite distinct, when one turns to the social reality of crime and enforcement it is difficult not to be struck by the fluidity of these categories. Emile Durkheim, in his pioneering sociological analysis of crime, argued that the regulation of social action should be understood in terms of a single category of rule, that of a social norm.22 The most important feature of norms is that they are all enforced, although some more obviously than others. This is because the punitive sanctions that are evoked by nonconformity have a socializing effect, by virtue of which the norm becomes internalized by individuals over time. Through this process of socialization, individuals acquire both intrinsic and extrinsic motives for compliance. As a result, sanctions become increasingly symbolic, aimed more at triggering internal self-control (as with mockery, humiliation, and moralizing condemnation). Because of this, among well-socialized adults, explicit sanctions in the form of rewards and punishments are reserved for only the most extreme cases, in which more subtle instruments of social control have failed. Moral norms, on this view, do not form a natural kind, but represent merely one end of a continuum.23 This gives them the appearance of being purely inner constraints, despite the fact that they are enforced by social sanctions like all other norms. Similarly with law, conformity is typically elicited through a combination of intrinsic and extrinsic motives. What makes law distinctive is not the fact that it is coercively enforced, since all norms are enforced, but that it is enforced through the organized sanctioning capacity of the state. In the informal social sphere, punishment of norm-violators is decentralized, ad hoc, and often based on withdrawal of cooperation.24 The state, by contrast, regiments this process through a set of formal mechanisms, including written specification of the rules, centralized enforcement by specialized agents, and costly, individually targeted punishment. At the same time, a great deal of the motivation for legal compliance remains intrinsic, arising both from malum in se convictions regarding the specific actions prohibited, as well as generalized respect for the authority of law. There is a complex division of labor involved in maintaining social order. Without some form of constraint, human society would resemble a Hobbesian state of nature, marked by widespread failures of coordination, cooperation, and collective action. The orderliness of everyday life is achieved through conformity to shared social norms, which not only prohibit various harmful or destructive forms of conduct, but also diminish the anxiety and cognitive strain involved in routine interactions. When this functions effectively, we are able to ignore most of the work that is involved in achieving this orderliness. The operations of socialization, symbolic sanctioning, and decentralized enforcement remain largely invisible, like the bulk of an iceberg sitting below the waterline. The law, by contrast, is like the visible portion of the iceberg. And yet, precisely because it is so easily observed, one can overestimate its importance. This dramatically inflates public perception of the efficacy of the sanctions that are imposed by the legal system. Particularly with respect to the criminal law, the vast majority of the population is deterred through a combination of informal social pressure (for example, concerns related to reputation, community standing, stigma, social role, and identity), and moral commitment.25 Fear of punishment is always in the background, but it provides a decisive consideration only with a small segment of the population. Criminologists often illustrate this through an “enforcement pyramid,” which has at its base purely intrinsic motives, then ascends through various mechanisms of informal social pressure, capped off by coercive punishment at the peak.26 The pyramid shape is intended to represent the fraction of offenders who can be brought into compliance without escalation to the higher mechanism. From this perspective, the police can be seen as specialized agents of social control, who are called upon to act when the upper levels of the enforcement pyramid are reached. This naturally makes them the primary agents of law enforcement, but it also involves them in a wide range of activities variously described as “order-maintenance” or “peacekeeping.” This view, which is the one most widely held by those who study the practice of policing, emphasizes the continuity and relations of mutual support between different systems of social control, and, in part for that reason, tolerates a great deal of ambiguity about the proper scope of police power. I refer to this model as communitarian, not only because it underlies most versions of “community policing,” but also because it is in tension with some of the commitments of political liberalism. While the state has long been characterized by its ability to employ coercive force in an organized fashion, the modern period has been marked by a much more ambitious attempt on the part of the state to assert a monopoly on the use of force in society. This ambition was clearly stated by John Locke, who thought that the primary feature of the social contract, through which the sovereign power of the state was constituted, was that individuals would surrender the natural right to the use of force in a punitive manner against one another.27 And yet, even though this ideal was clearly articulated in the 17th century, it did not become an institutional reality in Western societies until near the end of the 19th.28 Prior to that, the violence meted out by the state typically served as a supplement to the relatively high levels of retributive violence occurring in the informal social sphere (with the practice of dueling serving as the most high-profile example).29 The state did not attempt to prohibit this sort of violence until well into the 19th century, a process that went hand in hand with the development of policing.30 That this program of domestic pacification should coincide with the rise of modern policing is hardly an accident, since the state can only aspire to eliminate interpersonal violence once it has the institutional capacity not just to control it, but to offer at least a semi-credible replacement. Retributiveness is a powerful human impulse, which has so far proven resistant to all attempts at eradication. This means that when the forces of “law and order” appear unequal to the task of ensuring that the guilty are punished, members of the public will be inclined to take matters into their own hands. A significant fraction of crime is not first-order social deviance, but rather private vengeance in response to such deviance.31 As a result, the police are always subject to pressure from two directions. From “above” there are legislators and other state officials, who demand that the police enforce enacted laws, while from “below” there are members of civil society, who expect certain performances as a condition of their own willingness to refrain from engaging in private uses of force.32 This demand from below is what accounts for the widely noted phenomenon that the police, apart from the enforcement of statutory law, also act to maintain social order.33 Historically, this police power had an explicit constitutional justification in the relationship between the executive and other branches of government.34 European monarchs in the early modern period were taken to have two domains in which they could act without legislative authorization or oversight. Externally, there was the realm of foreign affairs, including military strategy and the prosecution of war, and internally, there was the “police”—in the original, archaic sense of the term—which involved promoting the well-being of the people and the good order of society.35 Democratic and republican revolutions led to the erosion of autonomous executive power and an expansion of legislative claims, in part because the legislature was seen as the conduit for popular sovereignty, which came to be regarded as the only legitimate basis of state power. This led to a dramatic expansion of the importance of statutory law, although the prerogative of the executive to conduct foreign affairs outside the scope of legislative control has largely been retained. The internal police power, however, fell into constitutional disrepute, leading to its preservation largely as an implicit police practice, given a veneer of legislative legitimacy through overcriminalization. The idea that the police enforce not just laws, but also the social order, sometimes evokes negative associations, and so it is important to be clear about its meaning. Social order, in the generic sociological sense, simply refers to the stability of the institutional systems governing everyday life.36 When private citizens reach the limit of what can be achieved through the informal enforcement mechanisms that are available to them, and, in particular, when they reach the limit of what can be achieved without recourse to force, they call the police. For the average patrol officer, this sort of call—to mediate a conflict between a landlord and tenant that is beginning to get out of hand, to intervene in a domestic dispute that has woken up the neighbors, to disperse a group of young people drinking in the park, to evict a bar patron who is refusing to leave, to deal with a mentally ill person who is scaring passengers at a bus stop—constitutes the overwhelming bulk of police work. When the police are obliged to use force in these circumstances, they appeal to statutory law in order to justify that use of force, despite the fact that the objectives they are pursuing, or the reasons for which they are using force, are often external to anything that is explicitly specified in any statute. As a result, modern policing winds up encompassing an eclectic list of responsibilities that defies easy summarization. (This is one of the reasons that police departments, despite possessing all the appurtenances of modern bureaucracy, are only superficially rule-governed organizations—most police decision-making is in fact driven by situational exigencies.)37 Part of the complexity is due to the fact that prohibiting civilians from engaging in uses of force has downstream effects (many of which were clearly unanticipated by social contract theorists who called for the prohibition). The recourse to force, or the availability of such recourse, has a structuring effect on other social practices, much of which escapes notice simply because, when effective, it results in force almost never having to be employed. For example, as Egon Bittner observed almost a half-century ago, there is a “profound misconception” about policing involved in the claim that, because there is substantial overlap between the tasks undertaken by police and social workers, the former could be replaced by the latter.38 The problem is not just that routine mental health and domestic disturbance calls have the potential to erupt into violence. It is also that the availability of recourse to force provides a form of decisiveness in action that is otherwise difficult to obtain. The central limitation of dialog and argumentation is that it can go on forever. At some point, however, discussion must cease and action must be taken. As Bittner emphasizes, citizens often call police in order to deal with situations that call for such decisive action.39 Furthermore, police intervention is often valued precisely for that reason (which explains, inter alia, why the police are involved in all emergency situations, regardless of the underlying nature of the problem). Because of these peculiarities of the role, the police stand in complex relationships of dependence with the communities that they serve. On the one hand, the effectiveness of legal regulation, and the capacity of the police to enforce statutory law, clearly depends on the quality of the underlying social order. This is a major theme in the work of Jane Jacobs, who emphasized that “no amount of police can enforce civilization when the normal, casual enforcement of it has broken down.”40 This is not just because police rely on members of the community to provide information, but also because the most important forms of deterrence are achieved through the informal social order. The real panopticon, Jacobs observed, are the “eyes on the street” of neighborhood residents, shopkeepers, and pedestrians, who create security simply by observing the comings and goings of others.41 By comparison, the police are extraordinarily limited in their ability to detect and deter crime. Yet, just as the police rely upon the informal social order to achieve compliance with the law (the way the visible part of the iceberg is supported by the larger bulk that rests below the waterline), members of the community depend upon the police to contribute to the maintenance and reproduction of the informal order, by intervening in situations that are beginning to get out of hand, or that escape the regulatory capacities of civil society. Police in these cases use force to supplement the informal, non-violent sanctions that are available to private individuals. This is where the most discretionary aspects of policing arise, because the patrol officer is forced to determine whether a situation is one that can be handled informally by the parties involved (perhaps once everyone is calmed down), or whether it requires formal intervention (and if so, what degree of sanction). Consider the case of individuals drinking in the park. In most jurisdictions, consumption of alcohol outside of a private home or a licensed public establishment is prohibited. And yet these laws are seldom enforced universally, but are merely used by police to break up groups whose behavior poses some other threat to public order (perhaps, but not necessarily, due to the influence of the alcohol consumed). The fact that some people are breaking the law by drinking in a public park says practically nothing about what the appropriate police response should be. Is it a young couple having a picnic, enjoying a glass of wine? Is it retired men from the neighborhood gathering in the afternoon? Is it a group of teenagers after dark? These are very different cases when it comes to assessing the disruptive potential of their behavior. Are they drinking socially, or are they getting drunk? And how are they drinking? Are they doing it discreetly, for their private enjoyment, or brazenly, in a way that shows disdain for the law? Is their presence intimidating, or interfering with other users of the park? And if intervention is warranted, should the alcohol merely be confiscated and the group ordered to disperse? Or should some or all be arrested? And once brought to the station, should they be released or detained overnight? An affront, as it is used here, is a challenge to the policeman's authority, control, and definition of the immediate situation. As seen by the police, an affront is simply a response on the part of the other which indicates to them that their position and authority in the interaction are not being taken seriously.43 Equally important is the role that judgments of respectability play in determining police response.45 Generally speaking, police are more likely to intervene, and to intervene punitively, when the person causing trouble belongs to a less respectable social category, just as they are more likely to take complaints seriously when they come from respectable individuals. The respectability of the “ordinary, law-abiding citizen” involves a generalized willingness to conform to social expectations and to defer to legitimate authority, and so is impaired by indications of either a history of, or propensity toward, social deviance. Thus the police focus their attention on individuals belonging to classes who pose the greatest threat to the social order. The most obvious targ","PeriodicalId":47624,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Political Philosophy","volume":"35 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":2.9000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The challenge of policing minorities in a liberal society\",\"authors\":\"Joseph Heath\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/jopp.12313\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The problem with police is not that they are fascist pigs but that our country is ruled by majoritarian pigs. Ta-Nehisi Coates To change the police without changing the police role in society is as futile as the labors of Sisyphus. John van Maanen This question is, I will argue, of considerable importance to political philosophy, because it exposes a tension in the liberal project as a whole. It has, unfortunately, been subject to relative neglect; there has until recently been very little philosophical or normative literature on policing, much less the policing of minorities.3 There are two reasons for this, both of them based ultimately on the perception that the problem is theoretically straightforward, and so does not raise any philosophically difficult questions.4 With respect to policing in general, many political philosophers appear to believe that the police are uninteresting, because they serve the purely instrumental role of enforcing statutory law. And with respect to minorities, widespread acceptance of the fascist pig theory leads to the perception that the problem is also normatively straightforward. If tensions between police and minorities are caused by the police being racist, then the solution is obviously for the police to become less racist. These two views, when combined, generate a highly simplistic account of the problem of policing minorities.5 It suggests that, since the police are there to enforce the law, all they need to do is enforce the law in a non-discriminatory way, treating all citizens equally, and the problem should go away. The argument, however, rests on a false premise, since the police do a great deal more than simply enforce the law, and it is primarily these other activities that give rise to problems. My preliminary contention in this article will be that both of the underlying theories about policing are false or misleading. Obviously, the police do enforce the law, but as several decades of work in the sociology of policing have shown, this is not all that they do, and, indeed, this does not even add up to a substantial fraction of what they do. And equally obviously, there are some police who are racist, both consciously and subconsciously, but this goes only part of the way to explaining the seriousness of the difficulties that practically every major police force experiences in its relations with particular minority groups.6 Indeed, a great deal of the motivation for the shift in emphasis toward “systemic racism” in expert discourse on the subject lies in the recognition that the emphasis on eliminating attitudinal racism or increasing officer diversity has reached the point of sharply diminishing returns in many jurisdictions.7 In order to understand the broader source of the problem, I will argue, it is necessary to see that effective policing is inherently communitarian. The result is that minority groups who are unable to implement a self-policing regime find themselves subject to coercive enforcement of social norms and standards of respectability that reflect parochial aspects of the majority culture, which they often resist. I refer to this, referencing Ta-Nehisi Coates, as the “majoritarian pigs” theory of oppressive policing.8 Liberalism, to the extent that it imposes a neutrality constraint only on statutory law, is powerless to remedy this problem directly, which is why the policing of minorities poses a fundamental challenge in liberal societies. To put the claim in highly condensed form: even when the state is liberal, society is not, and the police, in order to be effective, are obliged to meet society half-way.9 The article proceeds as follows. I begin by distinguishing two very different normative models of policing, which follow from different views about the basis of police authority. The first view, which I refer to as the legalist model of policing, rests on the claim that police power should be limited to law enforcement, narrowly construed (which is to say, preventing crimes in progress and apprehending those who have broken the law). In contrast to this, I will describe what I refer to as the communitarian model of policing, which regards the organized enforcement of statutory law as deeply intertwined with enforcement of the informal social order. The authority of the police, on this view, extends beyond the enforcement of law to include a wide range of interventions aimed at complementing the efforts of communities to maintain order. The communitarian model, as a reconstruction of policing best practice, is what underlies the widespread call for more “community policing” as a response to various ailments.10 It is not difficult to see, however, that this practice creates a number of normative difficulties in a pluralistic society. The central tension arises from the desire on the part of the liberal state to exercise a monopoly on the legitimate use of force while simultaneously enacting only laws that meet a fairly restrictive standard of justification. The consequence is that the police are subject to constant demands from the public for interventions that extend far beyond the ambit of law. In principle, this tension could be dissolved by adopting a legalist approach and restricting the activities of the police to law enforcement narrowly construed. I will therefore round out the argument by outlining several reasons why I think this would be neither desirable nor realistic. I unfortunately do not have any simple solutions to propose to the underlying dilemma. I do, however, think that a deeper understanding of the difficulty of the problem is important. Policing has been the subject of a great deal of debate in recent years, which has unfortunately exposed significant misunderstanding of policing as an institution, not just in the public at large, but among many academic commentators as well.11 This has many effects, one of which is to reinforce the pre-existing tendency among the police to see themselves as an embattled and misunderstood minority, which in turn provides them with grounds to dismiss normative demands made upon them. The first step toward amelioration of the situation must involve a proper understanding of the difficulty of the problem and the extent to which police are being subjected to contradictory demands. When sociologists first began to take an active interest in studying the police, in the late 1960s, they quickly acquired the Socratic wisdom—they came to realize that they didn't really understand what the police do most of the time, or why it is the police that are doing it. In particular, they discovered that statutory law enforcement constitutes a vanishingly small fraction of what the average patrol officer spends most of the day doing.12 Yet despite this puzzlement over what the police do, there was never any doubt about the distinctive characteristic of their institutional role, which is that they are agents of the state who are authorized to use force.13 It is also generally accepted within modern liberal societies that this authorization to use force is grounded in, or legitimated by, law—primarily criminal statutes, but also traffic and vehicle law, certain municipal and regional ordinances, and in some countries immigration law. The most common mistake, however, is to think that because the use of force by police is authorized by law, it is used only to enforce the law (or that its domain of application is limited to that of legally regulated behavior). Empirically, this is simply not the case, as police use the power that is granted to them by statutory law to pursue a range of extra-statutory objectives.14 This includes maintaining order, emergency response, protection, and rescue, and, perhaps most expansively, “brokering and enforcing social cooperation,” especially regarding the use of public space.15 This aspect of policing practice is obviously in tension with the dominant normative understanding of police power. The latter is closely tied to theories of political authority that regard the enforcement of law as the only legitimate basis for the use of force by agents of the state.16 This view follows from a number of different philosophical positions, but one can find a particularly clear version in Kantian theories of law, which draw a sharp distinction between morality and law, conceiving of the former as a system of rules that binds individuals internally, the latter a system of rules that binds them externally. To say that individuals are bound externally is to say that they are given incentives to act in conformity with the law, first and foremost through the threat of punishment in the event of noncompliance.17 Thus the use of force against individuals by agents of the state is justifiable only when it is used to secure compliance with a justifiable system of publicly promulgated laws.18 Although the police are often described informally as being responsible for “enforcing” these laws, technically punishment can only be imposed by the judiciary, and is carried out by the correctional system. The primary task of the police is to identify and apprehend individuals who are suspected of having broken the law, delivering them to the judiciary for trial. Thus the police operate at the front end of the criminal justice system, the point at which the enforcement of law is initiated. Secondary tasks then involve deterrence, which involves persuading individuals to obey the law through the threat of apprehension, and, in the rarer case, direct interdiction, which involves stopping individuals who are in the midst of committing an infraction. This way of thinking about state coercion gives rise to what can be characterized as a legalist theory of policing, on the grounds that it restricts the use of force by police to direct enforcement of the law.19 This implies that the police should have no power over the ordinary citizen, so long as the individual is not currently acting in an unlawful manner and is not suspected of having committed some other crime. It suggests that, absent some law to the contrary, individuals are under no obligation to speak to the police, to answer any questions posed, to obey their orders, or even to identify themselves, unless there is some direct connection between these actions and the investigation of criminal conduct. Individuals on this view enjoy an extremely broad sphere of liberty—such as the freedom to move at will through public space, to use offensive language or be verbally abusive toward others, perhaps even to brandish lethal weapons—so long as they have not committed any crime and are above any reasonable suspicion of having committed a crime. Public commitment to a legalist theory of policing has been encouraged by certain popular interpretations of the US Constitution, which become apparent when citizens of that country refuse to obey a direct order from a police officer, refuse to identify themselves, refuse to exit their vehicle, or refuse to circulate or disperse in public space, on the grounds that their ongoing activities are not in direct violation of any legal restriction. The situation is significantly complicated, however, by the fact that legislators in jurisdictions in which this view of police authority is widespread have often sought to undermine it by enacting extremely broad laws, which have the effect of legally prohibiting all conduct that is contrary to the will of the police. In other cases, courts have achieved the same effect by recognizing a class of “common law misdemeanors,” thus tacitly extending the criminal law.20 As a result, in some jurisdictions it is an offense to insult or show disrespect to a police officer, to fail to identify oneself, or to obstruct an investigation. Laws prohibiting loitering, vagrancy, nuisance, disorderly conduct, public mischief, and public intoxication can also be used in ways that essentially override any citizen's right to occupy public space. And finally, the offense of failing to obey a police officer—a common feature of motor vehicle law—can be extended to ordinary contexts of interaction. The result is the phenomenon of “overcriminalization,” in which the sphere of individual freedom is essentially extinguished by the legal prohibition of practically all conduct.21 But, of course, in most jurisdictions in which citizens are subject to this sort of overcriminalization, the sphere of individual freedom is seldom extinguished in practice, because the purpose of these laws is not really to prohibit the activity in question, but rather to grant police the discretion to control members of the public in response to situational exigencies. The important point, for our purposes, is that the existence of these broad prohibitions can render the legalist theory of police power trivially true. By making it the case that everyone is always breaking some law, any exercise of police power can be characterized as mere enforcement of the law. And yet the legal form clearly serves to conceal the true character of the underlying practice, which is not to arrest everyone who commits an infraction. While the police do engage in some by-the-book enforcement of statutory law, especially with respect to indictable offenses, they also use the power that is conferred upon them by statutory law to pursue other, extra-statutory objectives. They do so with the full knowledge and support of legislators, which is one of the reasons that the latter often respond to court-imposed restrictions on police power by crafting laws that expand the scope of police discretion. As we shall see, there are rival accounts of this “other objective” that police pursue, but before getting to that, it is important to consider why the legalist model of policing is not more widely embraced. Although philosophers sometimes speak of law and morality as though they were quite distinct, when one turns to the social reality of crime and enforcement it is difficult not to be struck by the fluidity of these categories. Emile Durkheim, in his pioneering sociological analysis of crime, argued that the regulation of social action should be understood in terms of a single category of rule, that of a social norm.22 The most important feature of norms is that they are all enforced, although some more obviously than others. This is because the punitive sanctions that are evoked by nonconformity have a socializing effect, by virtue of which the norm becomes internalized by individuals over time. Through this process of socialization, individuals acquire both intrinsic and extrinsic motives for compliance. As a result, sanctions become increasingly symbolic, aimed more at triggering internal self-control (as with mockery, humiliation, and moralizing condemnation). Because of this, among well-socialized adults, explicit sanctions in the form of rewards and punishments are reserved for only the most extreme cases, in which more subtle instruments of social control have failed. Moral norms, on this view, do not form a natural kind, but represent merely one end of a continuum.23 This gives them the appearance of being purely inner constraints, despite the fact that they are enforced by social sanctions like all other norms. Similarly with law, conformity is typically elicited through a combination of intrinsic and extrinsic motives. What makes law distinctive is not the fact that it is coercively enforced, since all norms are enforced, but that it is enforced through the organized sanctioning capacity of the state. In the informal social sphere, punishment of norm-violators is decentralized, ad hoc, and often based on withdrawal of cooperation.24 The state, by contrast, regiments this process through a set of formal mechanisms, including written specification of the rules, centralized enforcement by specialized agents, and costly, individually targeted punishment. At the same time, a great deal of the motivation for legal compliance remains intrinsic, arising both from malum in se convictions regarding the specific actions prohibited, as well as generalized respect for the authority of law. There is a complex division of labor involved in maintaining social order. Without some form of constraint, human society would resemble a Hobbesian state of nature, marked by widespread failures of coordination, cooperation, and collective action. The orderliness of everyday life is achieved through conformity to shared social norms, which not only prohibit various harmful or destructive forms of conduct, but also diminish the anxiety and cognitive strain involved in routine interactions. When this functions effectively, we are able to ignore most of the work that is involved in achieving this orderliness. The operations of socialization, symbolic sanctioning, and decentralized enforcement remain largely invisible, like the bulk of an iceberg sitting below the waterline. The law, by contrast, is like the visible portion of the iceberg. And yet, precisely because it is so easily observed, one can overestimate its importance. This dramatically inflates public perception of the efficacy of the sanctions that are imposed by the legal system. Particularly with respect to the criminal law, the vast majority of the population is deterred through a combination of informal social pressure (for example, concerns related to reputation, community standing, stigma, social role, and identity), and moral commitment.25 Fear of punishment is always in the background, but it provides a decisive consideration only with a small segment of the population. Criminologists often illustrate this through an “enforcement pyramid,” which has at its base purely intrinsic motives, then ascends through various mechanisms of informal social pressure, capped off by coercive punishment at the peak.26 The pyramid shape is intended to represent the fraction of offenders who can be brought into compliance without escalation to the higher mechanism. From this perspective, the police can be seen as specialized agents of social control, who are called upon to act when the upper levels of the enforcement pyramid are reached. This naturally makes them the primary agents of law enforcement, but it also involves them in a wide range of activities variously described as “order-maintenance” or “peacekeeping.” This view, which is the one most widely held by those who study the practice of policing, emphasizes the continuity and relations of mutual support between different systems of social control, and, in part for that reason, tolerates a great deal of ambiguity about the proper scope of police power. I refer to this model as communitarian, not only because it underlies most versions of “community policing,” but also because it is in tension with some of the commitments of political liberalism. While the state has long been characterized by its ability to employ coercive force in an organized fashion, the modern period has been marked by a much more ambitious attempt on the part of the state to assert a monopoly on the use of force in society. This ambition was clearly stated by John Locke, who thought that the primary feature of the social contract, through which the sovereign power of the state was constituted, was that individuals would surrender the natural right to the use of force in a punitive manner against one another.27 And yet, even though this ideal was clearly articulated in the 17th century, it did not become an institutional reality in Western societies until near the end of the 19th.28 Prior to that, the violence meted out by the state typically served as a supplement to the relatively high levels of retributive violence occurring in the informal social sphere (with the practice of dueling serving as the most high-profile example).29 The state did not attempt to prohibit this sort of violence until well into the 19th century, a process that went hand in hand with the development of policing.30 That this program of domestic pacification should coincide with the rise of modern policing is hardly an accident, since the state can only aspire to eliminate interpersonal violence once it has the institutional capacity not just to control it, but to offer at least a semi-credible replacement. Retributiveness is a powerful human impulse, which has so far proven resistant to all attempts at eradication. This means that when the forces of “law and order” appear unequal to the task of ensuring that the guilty are punished, members of the public will be inclined to take matters into their own hands. A significant fraction of crime is not first-order social deviance, but rather private vengeance in response to such deviance.31 As a result, the police are always subject to pressure from two directions. From “above” there are legislators and other state officials, who demand that the police enforce enacted laws, while from “below” there are members of civil society, who expect certain performances as a condition of their own willingness to refrain from engaging in private uses of force.32 This demand from below is what accounts for the widely noted phenomenon that the police, apart from the enforcement of statutory law, also act to maintain social order.33 Historically, this police power had an explicit constitutional justification in the relationship between the executive and other branches of government.34 European monarchs in the early modern period were taken to have two domains in which they could act without legislative authorization or oversight. Externally, there was the realm of foreign affairs, including military strategy and the prosecution of war, and internally, there was the “police”—in the original, archaic sense of the term—which involved promoting the well-being of the people and the good order of society.35 Democratic and republican revolutions led to the erosion of autonomous executive power and an expansion of legislative claims, in part because the legislature was seen as the conduit for popular sovereignty, which came to be regarded as the only legitimate basis of state power. This led to a dramatic expansion of the importance of statutory law, although the prerogative of the executive to conduct foreign affairs outside the scope of legislative control has largely been retained. The internal police power, however, fell into constitutional disrepute, leading to its preservation largely as an implicit police practice, given a veneer of legislative legitimacy through overcriminalization. The idea that the police enforce not just laws, but also the social order, sometimes evokes negative associations, and so it is important to be clear about its meaning. Social order, in the generic sociological sense, simply refers to the stability of the institutional systems governing everyday life.36 When private citizens reach the limit of what can be achieved through the informal enforcement mechanisms that are available to them, and, in particular, when they reach the limit of what can be achieved without recourse to force, they call the police. For the average patrol officer, this sort of call—to mediate a conflict between a landlord and tenant that is beginning to get out of hand, to intervene in a domestic dispute that has woken up the neighbors, to disperse a group of young people drinking in the park, to evict a bar patron who is refusing to leave, to deal with a mentally ill person who is scaring passengers at a bus stop—constitutes the overwhelming bulk of police work. When the police are obliged to use force in these circumstances, they appeal to statutory law in order to justify that use of force, despite the fact that the objectives they are pursuing, or the reasons for which they are using force, are often external to anything that is explicitly specified in any statute. As a result, modern policing winds up encompassing an eclectic list of responsibilities that defies easy summarization. (This is one of the reasons that police departments, despite possessing all the appurtenances of modern bureaucracy, are only superficially rule-governed organizations—most police decision-making is in fact driven by situational exigencies.)37 Part of the complexity is due to the fact that prohibiting civilians from engaging in uses of force has downstream effects (many of which were clearly unanticipated by social contract theorists who called for the prohibition). The recourse to force, or the availability of such recourse, has a structuring effect on other social practices, much of which escapes notice simply because, when effective, it results in force almost never having to be employed. For example, as Egon Bittner observed almost a half-century ago, there is a “profound misconception” about policing involved in the claim that, because there is substantial overlap between the tasks undertaken by police and social workers, the former could be replaced by the latter.38 The problem is not just that routine mental health and domestic disturbance calls have the potential to erupt into violence. It is also that the availability of recourse to force provides a form of decisiveness in action that is otherwise difficult to obtain. The central limitation of dialog and argumentation is that it can go on forever. At some point, however, discussion must cease and action must be taken. As Bittner emphasizes, citizens often call police in order to deal with situations that call for such decisive action.39 Furthermore, police intervention is often valued precisely for that reason (which explains, inter alia, why the police are involved in all emergency situations, regardless of the underlying nature of the problem). Because of these peculiarities of the role, the police stand in complex relationships of dependence with the communities that they serve. On the one hand, the effectiveness of legal regulation, and the capacity of the police to enforce statutory law, clearly depends on the quality of the underlying social order. This is a major theme in the work of Jane Jacobs, who emphasized that “no amount of police can enforce civilization when the normal, casual enforcement of it has broken down.”40 This is not just because police rely on members of the community to provide information, but also because the most important forms of deterrence are achieved through the informal social order. The real panopticon, Jacobs observed, are the “eyes on the street” of neighborhood residents, shopkeepers, and pedestrians, who create security simply by observing the comings and goings of others.41 By comparison, the police are extraordinarily limited in their ability to detect and deter crime. Yet, just as the police rely upon the informal social order to achieve compliance with the law (the way the visible part of the iceberg is supported by the larger bulk that rests below the waterline), members of the community depend upon the police to contribute to the maintenance and reproduction of the informal order, by intervening in situations that are beginning to get out of hand, or that escape the regulatory capacities of civil society. Police in these cases use force to supplement the informal, non-violent sanctions that are available to private individuals. This is where the most discretionary aspects of policing arise, because the patrol officer is forced to determine whether a situation is one that can be handled informally by the parties involved (perhaps once everyone is calmed down), or whether it requires formal intervention (and if so, what degree of sanction). Consider the case of individuals drinking in the park. In most jurisdictions, consumption of alcohol outside of a private home or a licensed public establishment is prohibited. And yet these laws are seldom enforced universally, but are merely used by police to break up groups whose behavior poses some other threat to public order (perhaps, but not necessarily, due to the influence of the alcohol consumed). The fact that some people are breaking the law by drinking in a public park says practically nothing about what the appropriate police response should be. Is it a young couple having a picnic, enjoying a glass of wine? Is it retired men from the neighborhood gathering in the afternoon? Is it a group of teenagers after dark? These are very different cases when it comes to assessing the disruptive potential of their behavior. Are they drinking socially, or are they getting drunk? And how are they drinking? Are they doing it discreetly, for their private enjoyment, or brazenly, in a way that shows disdain for the law? Is their presence intimidating, or interfering with other users of the park? And if intervention is warranted, should the alcohol merely be confiscated and the group ordered to disperse? Or should some or all be arrested? And once brought to the station, should they be released or detained overnight? An affront, as it is used here, is a challenge to the policeman's authority, control, and definition of the immediate situation. As seen by the police, an affront is simply a response on the part of the other which indicates to them that their position and authority in the interaction are not being taken seriously.43 Equally important is the role that judgments of respectability play in determining police response.45 Generally speaking, police are more likely to intervene, and to intervene punitively, when the person causing trouble belongs to a less respectable social category, just as they are more likely to take complaints seriously when they come from respectable individuals. The respectability of the “ordinary, law-abiding citizen” involves a generalized willingness to conform to social expectations and to defer to legitimate authority, and so is impaired by indications of either a history of, or propensity toward, social deviance. Thus the police focus their attention on individuals belonging to classes who pose the greatest threat to the social order. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

警察的问题不在于他们是法西斯猪,而是我们的国家是由多数主义猪统治的。改变警察而不改变警察在社会中的角色是徒劳的,就像西西弗斯的劳动一样。这个问题,我认为,对政治哲学来说是相当重要的,因为它暴露了整个自由主义计划中的一种张力。不幸的是,它一直受到相对忽视;直到最近,关于治安的哲学或规范文献还很少,更不用说少数民族的治安了这有两个原因,它们最终都基于这样一种认识,即这个问题在理论上是直截了当地的,因此不会提出任何哲学上的难题就一般的警务而言,许多政治哲学家似乎认为警察是无趣的,因为他们纯粹是执行成文法的工具角色。至于少数民族,法西斯猪理论的广泛接受导致人们认为这个问题在规范上也是直截了当的。如果警察和少数民族之间的紧张关系是由警察的种族主义造成的,那么解决办法显然是让警察变得不那么种族主义。当这两种观点结合在一起时,就产生了对少数民族治安问题的高度简单化的解释这表明,既然警察是来执法的,他们所需要做的就是以一种非歧视的方式执法,平等对待所有公民,那么问题就会消失。然而,这一论点建立在一个错误的前提之上,因为警察所做的不仅仅是执行法律,而且主要是这些其他活动引起了问题。我在本文中的初步论点是,这两种关于警务的基本理论都是错误的或具有误导性的。显然,警察确实是在执行法律,但几十年的警务社会学研究表明,这并不是他们所做的全部工作,事实上,这甚至不是他们所做工作的很大一部分。同样明显的是,有些警察在意识上和潜意识里都是种族主义者,但这只能部分解释几乎每个主要警察部队在处理与特定少数群体的关系时所经历的困难的严重性事实上,在关于这一问题的专家论述中,把重点转向“系统性种族主义”的主要动机在于认识到,在许多司法管辖区,强调消除态度上的种族主义或增加官员多样性已经达到了收益急剧减少的地步为了更广泛地理解问题的根源,我认为,有必要看到有效的警务本质上是社群主义的。其结果是,无法实施自我监管制度的少数群体发现自己受制于强制执行的社会规范和体面标准,这些规范和标准反映了多数文化的狭隘方面,而他们往往抵制这些规范和标准。我引用Ta-Nehisi Coates的观点,将其称为压迫性警务的“多数主义猪”理论在某种程度上,自由主义只对成文法施加中立性约束,它无力直接解决这个问题,这就是为什么对少数群体的监管对自由社会构成了根本性挑战。简单地说就是:即使国家是自由的,社会也不是,而警察为了有效,必须向社会妥协文章的内容如下。首先,我将区分两种截然不同的警务规范模式,这两种模式源于对警察权威基础的不同看法。第一种观点,我称之为警察的法律主义模式,基于这样一种主张,即警察的权力应该局限于执法,狭义地解释(也就是说,防止正在进行的犯罪和逮捕那些违法的人)。与此相反,我将描述我所说的社区主义警务模式,它将成文法的有组织执行与非正式社会秩序的执行深深交织在一起。根据这种观点,警察的权力超出了执法的范围,还包括旨在补充社区维持秩序的努力的广泛干预。社区主义模式,作为警务最佳实践的重建,是广泛呼吁更多的“社区警务”作为对各种疾病的回应的基础然而,不难看出,这种做法在一个多元化的社会中造成了一些规范上的困难。 这种对国家强制的思考方式产生了一种可以被描述为法律主义的治安理论,理由是它限制了警察使用武力来指导法律的执行这意味着警察不应该对普通公民有任何权力,只要这个人目前没有以非法方式行事,也没有涉嫌犯下其他罪行。它表明,如果没有相反的法律,个人没有义务与警察交谈,回答提出的任何问题,服从他们的命令,甚至没有义务表明自己的身份,除非这些行动与调查犯罪行为之间有某种直接联系。持这种观点的个人享有极其广泛的自由——比如在公共空间随意走动的自由,对他人使用攻击性语言或口头辱骂的自由,甚至挥舞致命武器的自由——只要他们没有犯罪,并且没有任何犯罪的合理怀疑。对美国宪法的某些流行解释鼓励了公众对法律主义警务理论的承诺,当美国公民拒绝服从警察的直接命令,拒绝表明自己的身份,拒绝离开他们的车辆,或者拒绝在公共场所流通或分散,理由是他们正在进行的活动没有直接违反任何法律限制时,这一点就很明显了。然而,由于在这种对警察权力的看法普遍存在的司法管辖区,立法者往往试图通过颁布极其宽泛的法律来破坏这种权力,这种法律的效果是在法律上禁止一切违背警察意愿的行为,因此情况变得极为复杂。在其他案件中,法院通过承认一类“普通法上的轻罪”达到了同样的效果,从而默认地扩展了刑法因此,在某些司法管辖区,侮辱或不尊重警察、不表明身份或妨碍调查都是一种犯罪行为。禁止游荡、流浪、滋扰、行为不端、公共恶作剧和公共场所醉酒的法律也可以被用来基本上凌驾于任何公民占据公共空间的权利之上。最后,不服从警察的犯罪行为——机动车法的一个共同特征——可以扩展到普通的互动环境中。其结果是“过度定罪”现象,在这种现象中,个人自由的范围基本上被法律对几乎所有行为的禁止所消灭但是,当然,在大多数司法管辖区,公民受到这种过度定罪,个人自由的领域在实践中很少被消灭,因为这些法律的目的并不是真正禁止有问题的活动,而是赋予警察自由裁量权来控制公众成员,以应对紧急情况。就我们的目的而言,重要的一点是,这些广泛禁令的存在可以使法家关于警察权力的理论变得微不足道。如果每个人都总是违反一些法律,那么警察权力的任何行使都可以被定性为仅仅是执法。然而,法律形式显然掩盖了基本实践的真实特征,即不是逮捕每一个违法的人。虽然警察确实在一定程度上照章执行成文法,特别是在可起诉的罪行方面,但他们也利用成文法赋予他们的权力来追求其他法定之外的目标。他们这样做是在立法者的充分了解和支持下进行的,这也是立法者经常通过制定扩大警察自由裁量权范围的法律来回应法院对警察权力的限制的原因之一。正如我们将看到的,对于警察追求的这个“其他目标”有不同的说法,但在此之前,重要的是要考虑为什么法律主义的警务模式没有得到更广泛的接受。虽然哲学家有时谈到法律和道德时,似乎它们是截然不同的,但当人们转向犯罪和执法的社会现实时,很难不被这些范畴的流动性所震惊。埃米尔·迪尔凯姆在他对犯罪的开创性社会学分析中认为,社会行为的规范应该被理解为一种单一的规则类别,即社会规范规范最重要的特征是它们都是强制执行的,尽管有些规范比其他规范更明显。这是因为,不从众引发的惩罚性制裁具有社交效应,通过这种效应,规范随着时间的推移被个人内化。通过这一社会化过程,个体获得了内在和外在的服从动机。 因此,制裁变得越来越具有象征意义,更多的是为了激发内部的自我控制(如嘲弄、羞辱和道德谴责)。正因为如此,在社交良好的成年人中,只有在最极端的情况下,才会以奖惩的形式进行明确的制裁,在这种情况下,更微妙的社会控制手段已经失败了。在这种观点看来,道德规范并不构成一种自然的类型,而仅仅代表一个连续体的一端这使它们看起来纯粹是内部约束,尽管事实上它们像所有其他规范一样受到社会制裁的强制执行。与法律类似,一致性通常是通过内在动机和外在动机的结合而产生的。法律的独特之处不在于它是强制执行的,因为所有规范都是强制执行的,而在于它是通过国家有组织的制裁能力来强制执行的。在非正式的社会领域,对违反规范者的惩罚是分散的、特别的,而且常常以停止合作为基础相比之下,国家通过一套正式的机制来控制这一过程,包括规则的书面说明,专门代理人的集中执行,以及代价高昂的、针对个人的惩罚。与此同时,遵守法律的许多动机仍然是内在的,这既源于对被禁止的具体行动的恶意认定,也源于对法律权威的普遍尊重。维持社会秩序需要复杂的劳动分工。如果没有某种形式的约束,人类社会将类似于霍布斯的自然状态,以协调、合作和集体行动的普遍失败为特征。日常生活的有序是通过遵守共同的社会规范来实现的,这些规范不仅禁止各种有害或破坏性的行为形式,而且还减少了日常互动中涉及的焦虑和认知压力。当它有效地发挥作用时,我们就能够忽略实现这种有序所涉及的大部分工作。社会化、象征性制裁和分散执法的运作在很大程度上仍然是看不见的,就像冰山的大部分位于水线以下。相比之下,法律就像冰山可见的部分。然而,正是因为它很容易被观察到,人们可能高估了它的重要性。这极大地夸大了公众对法律制度施加的制裁效力的看法。特别是在刑法方面,绝大多数人是通过非正式的社会压力(例如,对声誉、社区地位、耻辱、社会角色和身份的关注)和道德承诺的结合而被阻止的对惩罚的恐惧总是处于背景之中,但它只对一小部分人提供了决定性的考虑。犯罪学家经常通过一个“强制执行金字塔”来说明这一点,这个金字塔的基础是纯粹的内在动机,然后通过各种非正式的社会压力机制上升,最后以强制性惩罚达到顶峰金字塔形状的目的是代表违规者的比例,他们可以在不升级到更高的机制的情况下遵守规定。从这个角度来看,警察可以被看作是社会控制的专门代理人,当到达执行金字塔的上层时,他们被要求采取行动。这自然使他们成为执法的主要代理人,但也使他们参与各种被称为“维持秩序”或“维持和平”的活动。这种观点是研究警务实践的人最广泛持有的观点,它强调不同社会控制系统之间的连续性和相互支持的关系,而且,部分出于这个原因,对警察权力的适当范围有很大的模糊性。我把这种模式称为社区主义,不仅因为它是大多数“社区治安”的基础,还因为它与政治自由主义的一些承诺存在紧张关系。长期以来,国家一直以有组织地使用强制性武力的能力为特征,而现代时期的特点是,国家方面更加雄心勃勃地试图垄断社会中对武力的使用。约翰·洛克(John Locke)清楚地阐述了这一雄心,他认为社会契约的主要特征,即国家主权权力的构成,是个人将放弃自然权利,以惩罚性的方式对彼此使用武力然而,尽管这一理想在17世纪就已经清晰地表达出来,但直到19世纪末,它才在西方社会成为一种制度性的现实。 在此之前,国家施加的暴力通常是对发生在非正式社会领域的相对较高水平的报复性暴力的补充(决斗的做法是最引人注目的例子)直到进入19世纪,国家才试图禁止这种暴力,这一过程与警察的发展密切相关这一国内平反计划与现代警务的兴起同时出现绝非偶然,因为国家只有在具备了不仅能控制人际暴力,而且至少能提供一种半可信的替代品的制度能力后,才能渴望消除人际暴力。报复是一种强大的人类冲动,迄今为止,它已被证明对所有根除的企图都具有抵抗力。这意味着,当“法律和秩序”的力量似乎无法胜任确保罪犯受到惩罚的任务时,公众将倾向于自己动手。很大一部分犯罪不是一级的社会越轨行为,而是针对这种越轨行为的私人报复因此,警察总是受到来自两个方向的压力。从“上面”有立法者和其他国家官员,他们要求警察执行制定的法律,而从“下面”有公民社会的成员,他们希望某些表演作为他们自己愿意不参与私人使用武力的条件这种来自下层的要求解释了一个广为注意的现象,即警察除了执行成文法外,还担负着维持社会秩序的责任从历史上看,这种警察权力在行政部门和政府其他部门之间的关系中有明确的宪法依据近代早期的欧洲君主被认为有两个领域,他们可以在没有立法授权或监督的情况下行事。在外部,有外交事务领域,包括军事战略和战争的实施,在内部,有“警察”——这个词最初的、古老的意义——涉及促进人民的福祉和社会的良好秩序民主和共和革命导致了自治行政权力的削弱和立法要求的扩大,部分原因是立法机构被视为人民主权的管道,而人民主权被视为国家权力的唯一合法基础。这导致成文法的重要性急剧扩大,尽管行政机关在立法控制范围之外处理外交事务的特权在很大程度上得到保留。然而,内部警察权力在宪法上声名狼藉,导致其在很大程度上被保留为一种隐含的警察做法,通过过度定罪获得立法合法性的表象。警察不仅执行法律,而且还执行社会秩序,这种想法有时会引起负面联想,因此明确其含义很重要。社会秩序,在一般的社会学意义上,仅仅是指管理日常生活的制度体系的稳定性当普通公民通过非正式的执法机制所能达到的目标达到极限时,特别是当他们达到不诉诸武力所能达到的目标的极限时,他们就会报警。对普通巡警,这种调用调解一个房东和房客之间的冲突开始失控,干预国内争端叫醒邻居,驱散一群年轻人在公园里喝,驱逐拒绝离开酒吧时,应对一名患有精神病的人吓到乘客在公交stop-constitutes大量警察的工作。当警察在这种情况下被迫使用武力时,他们诉诸成文法以证明使用武力是正当的,尽管他们所追求的目标或他们使用武力的理由往往不在任何法规明确规定的范围之内。因此,现代警务工作的职责五花八门,难以简单概括。(这是警察部门尽管拥有现代官僚机构的所有附属物,但只是表面上由规则管理的组织的原因之一——大多数警察决策实际上是由情境紧急情况驱动的。)37这种复杂性的部分原因是禁止平民使用武力会产生下游效应(其中许多显然是呼吁禁止的社会契约理论家没有预料到的)。 诉诸武力,或这种诉诸武力的可能性,对其他社会实践具有结构性影响,其中许多没有引起注意,只是因为,当它有效时,它导致几乎不必使用武力。例如,正如埃贡·比特纳(Egon Bittner)在近半个世纪前所观察到的那样,由于警察和社会工作者所承担的任务之间存在大量重叠,因此前者可以被后者所取代,这种说法涉及到对警务工作的“深刻误解”问题不只是日常的心理健康和家庭纠纷电话有可能演变成暴力。同样重要的是,可以诉诸武力提供了一种行动上的果断,而这种果断在其他情况下是很难获得的。对话和论证的主要局限在于它可以永远进行下去。然而,在某些时候,讨论必须停止,必须采取行动。正如比特纳所强调的,市民经常打电话给警察是为了处理需要采取果断行动的情况此外,警察干预往往正是因为这个原因而受到重视(这除其他外,解释了为什么警察参与所有紧急情况,而不管问题的根本性质如何)。由于这一角色的特殊性,警察与他们所服务的社区之间存在着复杂的依赖关系。一方面,法律规制的有效性,以及警察执行成文法的能力,显然取决于底层社会秩序的质量。这是简·雅各布斯(Jane Jacobs)作品中的一个主要主题,她强调“当正常的、随意的强制执行已经失效时,再多的警察也无法强制执行文明。”这不仅是因为警察依靠社区成员提供信息,还因为最重要的威慑形式是通过非正式的社会秩序实现的。41 .雅各布斯观察到,真正的圆形监狱是邻里居民、店主和行人的“街上的眼睛”,他们仅仅通过观察其他人的来来去去就创造了安全相比之下,警察在侦查和制止犯罪方面的能力非常有限。然而,正如警察依靠非正式的社会秩序来实现对法律的遵守(冰山可见的部分由水线以下的更大的部分支撑),社区成员依靠警察来维持和再生产非正式秩序,通过干预开始失控的情况,或者脱离公民社会的监管能力。在这些情况下,警察使用武力来补充私人可以使用的非正式的非暴力制裁。这就是警务工作中最自由裁量的方面,因为巡逻人员被迫决定一个情况是否可以由有关各方非正式地处理(也许是在每个人都冷静下来之后),或者是否需要正式干预(如果需要,制裁程度如何)。以个人在公园里喝酒为例。在大多数司法管辖区,禁止在私人住宅或有执照的公共场所以外饮酒。然而,这些法律很少得到普遍执行,而只是被警察用来驱散那些行为对公共秩序构成其他威胁的团体(也许,但不一定是由于饮酒的影响)。有些人在公园里喝酒是违法的,这一事实实际上并没有说明警察应该如何作出适当的反应。是一对年轻夫妇在野餐,喝着葡萄酒?是下午邻里聚会的退休男人吗?是一群天黑后的青少年吗?在评估他们行为的破坏性潜力时,这是非常不同的情况。他们是在社交场合喝酒,还是喝醉了?他们是怎么喝的?他们是谨慎行事,自娱自乐呢,还是明目张胆,藐视律法呢?他们的出现是否会威胁到公园的其他用户?如果有必要进行干预,是否应该没收酒,并命令这群人解散?还是应该逮捕部分或全部?一旦被带到车站,他们是应该被释放还是被拘留一夜?在这里,“侮辱”指的是对警察的权威、控制力和对当前形势的定义的挑战。在警察看来,侮辱只是对方的一种反应,向他们表明,他们在互动中的地位和权威没有得到认真对待同样重要的是,对体面的判断在决定警察的反应时所起的作用。 一般来说,当制造麻烦的人属于一个不太受尊敬的社会阶层时,警察更有可能进行干预,而且是惩罚性的干预,正如当投诉来自受尊敬的人时,警察更有可能认真对待投诉一样。“普通守法公民”的可敬性包括一种符合社会期望和服从合法权威的普遍意愿,因此会因社会越轨的历史或倾向而受到损害。因此,警察把注意力集中在那些对社会秩序构成最大威胁的阶级的个人身上。最明显的目标
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The challenge of policing minorities in a liberal society
The problem with police is not that they are fascist pigs but that our country is ruled by majoritarian pigs. Ta-Nehisi Coates To change the police without changing the police role in society is as futile as the labors of Sisyphus. John van Maanen This question is, I will argue, of considerable importance to political philosophy, because it exposes a tension in the liberal project as a whole. It has, unfortunately, been subject to relative neglect; there has until recently been very little philosophical or normative literature on policing, much less the policing of minorities.3 There are two reasons for this, both of them based ultimately on the perception that the problem is theoretically straightforward, and so does not raise any philosophically difficult questions.4 With respect to policing in general, many political philosophers appear to believe that the police are uninteresting, because they serve the purely instrumental role of enforcing statutory law. And with respect to minorities, widespread acceptance of the fascist pig theory leads to the perception that the problem is also normatively straightforward. If tensions between police and minorities are caused by the police being racist, then the solution is obviously for the police to become less racist. These two views, when combined, generate a highly simplistic account of the problem of policing minorities.5 It suggests that, since the police are there to enforce the law, all they need to do is enforce the law in a non-discriminatory way, treating all citizens equally, and the problem should go away. The argument, however, rests on a false premise, since the police do a great deal more than simply enforce the law, and it is primarily these other activities that give rise to problems. My preliminary contention in this article will be that both of the underlying theories about policing are false or misleading. Obviously, the police do enforce the law, but as several decades of work in the sociology of policing have shown, this is not all that they do, and, indeed, this does not even add up to a substantial fraction of what they do. And equally obviously, there are some police who are racist, both consciously and subconsciously, but this goes only part of the way to explaining the seriousness of the difficulties that practically every major police force experiences in its relations with particular minority groups.6 Indeed, a great deal of the motivation for the shift in emphasis toward “systemic racism” in expert discourse on the subject lies in the recognition that the emphasis on eliminating attitudinal racism or increasing officer diversity has reached the point of sharply diminishing returns in many jurisdictions.7 In order to understand the broader source of the problem, I will argue, it is necessary to see that effective policing is inherently communitarian. The result is that minority groups who are unable to implement a self-policing regime find themselves subject to coercive enforcement of social norms and standards of respectability that reflect parochial aspects of the majority culture, which they often resist. I refer to this, referencing Ta-Nehisi Coates, as the “majoritarian pigs” theory of oppressive policing.8 Liberalism, to the extent that it imposes a neutrality constraint only on statutory law, is powerless to remedy this problem directly, which is why the policing of minorities poses a fundamental challenge in liberal societies. To put the claim in highly condensed form: even when the state is liberal, society is not, and the police, in order to be effective, are obliged to meet society half-way.9 The article proceeds as follows. I begin by distinguishing two very different normative models of policing, which follow from different views about the basis of police authority. The first view, which I refer to as the legalist model of policing, rests on the claim that police power should be limited to law enforcement, narrowly construed (which is to say, preventing crimes in progress and apprehending those who have broken the law). In contrast to this, I will describe what I refer to as the communitarian model of policing, which regards the organized enforcement of statutory law as deeply intertwined with enforcement of the informal social order. The authority of the police, on this view, extends beyond the enforcement of law to include a wide range of interventions aimed at complementing the efforts of communities to maintain order. The communitarian model, as a reconstruction of policing best practice, is what underlies the widespread call for more “community policing” as a response to various ailments.10 It is not difficult to see, however, that this practice creates a number of normative difficulties in a pluralistic society. The central tension arises from the desire on the part of the liberal state to exercise a monopoly on the legitimate use of force while simultaneously enacting only laws that meet a fairly restrictive standard of justification. The consequence is that the police are subject to constant demands from the public for interventions that extend far beyond the ambit of law. In principle, this tension could be dissolved by adopting a legalist approach and restricting the activities of the police to law enforcement narrowly construed. I will therefore round out the argument by outlining several reasons why I think this would be neither desirable nor realistic. I unfortunately do not have any simple solutions to propose to the underlying dilemma. I do, however, think that a deeper understanding of the difficulty of the problem is important. Policing has been the subject of a great deal of debate in recent years, which has unfortunately exposed significant misunderstanding of policing as an institution, not just in the public at large, but among many academic commentators as well.11 This has many effects, one of which is to reinforce the pre-existing tendency among the police to see themselves as an embattled and misunderstood minority, which in turn provides them with grounds to dismiss normative demands made upon them. The first step toward amelioration of the situation must involve a proper understanding of the difficulty of the problem and the extent to which police are being subjected to contradictory demands. When sociologists first began to take an active interest in studying the police, in the late 1960s, they quickly acquired the Socratic wisdom—they came to realize that they didn't really understand what the police do most of the time, or why it is the police that are doing it. In particular, they discovered that statutory law enforcement constitutes a vanishingly small fraction of what the average patrol officer spends most of the day doing.12 Yet despite this puzzlement over what the police do, there was never any doubt about the distinctive characteristic of their institutional role, which is that they are agents of the state who are authorized to use force.13 It is also generally accepted within modern liberal societies that this authorization to use force is grounded in, or legitimated by, law—primarily criminal statutes, but also traffic and vehicle law, certain municipal and regional ordinances, and in some countries immigration law. The most common mistake, however, is to think that because the use of force by police is authorized by law, it is used only to enforce the law (or that its domain of application is limited to that of legally regulated behavior). Empirically, this is simply not the case, as police use the power that is granted to them by statutory law to pursue a range of extra-statutory objectives.14 This includes maintaining order, emergency response, protection, and rescue, and, perhaps most expansively, “brokering and enforcing social cooperation,” especially regarding the use of public space.15 This aspect of policing practice is obviously in tension with the dominant normative understanding of police power. The latter is closely tied to theories of political authority that regard the enforcement of law as the only legitimate basis for the use of force by agents of the state.16 This view follows from a number of different philosophical positions, but one can find a particularly clear version in Kantian theories of law, which draw a sharp distinction between morality and law, conceiving of the former as a system of rules that binds individuals internally, the latter a system of rules that binds them externally. To say that individuals are bound externally is to say that they are given incentives to act in conformity with the law, first and foremost through the threat of punishment in the event of noncompliance.17 Thus the use of force against individuals by agents of the state is justifiable only when it is used to secure compliance with a justifiable system of publicly promulgated laws.18 Although the police are often described informally as being responsible for “enforcing” these laws, technically punishment can only be imposed by the judiciary, and is carried out by the correctional system. The primary task of the police is to identify and apprehend individuals who are suspected of having broken the law, delivering them to the judiciary for trial. Thus the police operate at the front end of the criminal justice system, the point at which the enforcement of law is initiated. Secondary tasks then involve deterrence, which involves persuading individuals to obey the law through the threat of apprehension, and, in the rarer case, direct interdiction, which involves stopping individuals who are in the midst of committing an infraction. This way of thinking about state coercion gives rise to what can be characterized as a legalist theory of policing, on the grounds that it restricts the use of force by police to direct enforcement of the law.19 This implies that the police should have no power over the ordinary citizen, so long as the individual is not currently acting in an unlawful manner and is not suspected of having committed some other crime. It suggests that, absent some law to the contrary, individuals are under no obligation to speak to the police, to answer any questions posed, to obey their orders, or even to identify themselves, unless there is some direct connection between these actions and the investigation of criminal conduct. Individuals on this view enjoy an extremely broad sphere of liberty—such as the freedom to move at will through public space, to use offensive language or be verbally abusive toward others, perhaps even to brandish lethal weapons—so long as they have not committed any crime and are above any reasonable suspicion of having committed a crime. Public commitment to a legalist theory of policing has been encouraged by certain popular interpretations of the US Constitution, which become apparent when citizens of that country refuse to obey a direct order from a police officer, refuse to identify themselves, refuse to exit their vehicle, or refuse to circulate or disperse in public space, on the grounds that their ongoing activities are not in direct violation of any legal restriction. The situation is significantly complicated, however, by the fact that legislators in jurisdictions in which this view of police authority is widespread have often sought to undermine it by enacting extremely broad laws, which have the effect of legally prohibiting all conduct that is contrary to the will of the police. In other cases, courts have achieved the same effect by recognizing a class of “common law misdemeanors,” thus tacitly extending the criminal law.20 As a result, in some jurisdictions it is an offense to insult or show disrespect to a police officer, to fail to identify oneself, or to obstruct an investigation. Laws prohibiting loitering, vagrancy, nuisance, disorderly conduct, public mischief, and public intoxication can also be used in ways that essentially override any citizen's right to occupy public space. And finally, the offense of failing to obey a police officer—a common feature of motor vehicle law—can be extended to ordinary contexts of interaction. The result is the phenomenon of “overcriminalization,” in which the sphere of individual freedom is essentially extinguished by the legal prohibition of practically all conduct.21 But, of course, in most jurisdictions in which citizens are subject to this sort of overcriminalization, the sphere of individual freedom is seldom extinguished in practice, because the purpose of these laws is not really to prohibit the activity in question, but rather to grant police the discretion to control members of the public in response to situational exigencies. The important point, for our purposes, is that the existence of these broad prohibitions can render the legalist theory of police power trivially true. By making it the case that everyone is always breaking some law, any exercise of police power can be characterized as mere enforcement of the law. And yet the legal form clearly serves to conceal the true character of the underlying practice, which is not to arrest everyone who commits an infraction. While the police do engage in some by-the-book enforcement of statutory law, especially with respect to indictable offenses, they also use the power that is conferred upon them by statutory law to pursue other, extra-statutory objectives. They do so with the full knowledge and support of legislators, which is one of the reasons that the latter often respond to court-imposed restrictions on police power by crafting laws that expand the scope of police discretion. As we shall see, there are rival accounts of this “other objective” that police pursue, but before getting to that, it is important to consider why the legalist model of policing is not more widely embraced. Although philosophers sometimes speak of law and morality as though they were quite distinct, when one turns to the social reality of crime and enforcement it is difficult not to be struck by the fluidity of these categories. Emile Durkheim, in his pioneering sociological analysis of crime, argued that the regulation of social action should be understood in terms of a single category of rule, that of a social norm.22 The most important feature of norms is that they are all enforced, although some more obviously than others. This is because the punitive sanctions that are evoked by nonconformity have a socializing effect, by virtue of which the norm becomes internalized by individuals over time. Through this process of socialization, individuals acquire both intrinsic and extrinsic motives for compliance. As a result, sanctions become increasingly symbolic, aimed more at triggering internal self-control (as with mockery, humiliation, and moralizing condemnation). Because of this, among well-socialized adults, explicit sanctions in the form of rewards and punishments are reserved for only the most extreme cases, in which more subtle instruments of social control have failed. Moral norms, on this view, do not form a natural kind, but represent merely one end of a continuum.23 This gives them the appearance of being purely inner constraints, despite the fact that they are enforced by social sanctions like all other norms. Similarly with law, conformity is typically elicited through a combination of intrinsic and extrinsic motives. What makes law distinctive is not the fact that it is coercively enforced, since all norms are enforced, but that it is enforced through the organized sanctioning capacity of the state. In the informal social sphere, punishment of norm-violators is decentralized, ad hoc, and often based on withdrawal of cooperation.24 The state, by contrast, regiments this process through a set of formal mechanisms, including written specification of the rules, centralized enforcement by specialized agents, and costly, individually targeted punishment. At the same time, a great deal of the motivation for legal compliance remains intrinsic, arising both from malum in se convictions regarding the specific actions prohibited, as well as generalized respect for the authority of law. There is a complex division of labor involved in maintaining social order. Without some form of constraint, human society would resemble a Hobbesian state of nature, marked by widespread failures of coordination, cooperation, and collective action. The orderliness of everyday life is achieved through conformity to shared social norms, which not only prohibit various harmful or destructive forms of conduct, but also diminish the anxiety and cognitive strain involved in routine interactions. When this functions effectively, we are able to ignore most of the work that is involved in achieving this orderliness. The operations of socialization, symbolic sanctioning, and decentralized enforcement remain largely invisible, like the bulk of an iceberg sitting below the waterline. The law, by contrast, is like the visible portion of the iceberg. And yet, precisely because it is so easily observed, one can overestimate its importance. This dramatically inflates public perception of the efficacy of the sanctions that are imposed by the legal system. Particularly with respect to the criminal law, the vast majority of the population is deterred through a combination of informal social pressure (for example, concerns related to reputation, community standing, stigma, social role, and identity), and moral commitment.25 Fear of punishment is always in the background, but it provides a decisive consideration only with a small segment of the population. Criminologists often illustrate this through an “enforcement pyramid,” which has at its base purely intrinsic motives, then ascends through various mechanisms of informal social pressure, capped off by coercive punishment at the peak.26 The pyramid shape is intended to represent the fraction of offenders who can be brought into compliance without escalation to the higher mechanism. From this perspective, the police can be seen as specialized agents of social control, who are called upon to act when the upper levels of the enforcement pyramid are reached. This naturally makes them the primary agents of law enforcement, but it also involves them in a wide range of activities variously described as “order-maintenance” or “peacekeeping.” This view, which is the one most widely held by those who study the practice of policing, emphasizes the continuity and relations of mutual support between different systems of social control, and, in part for that reason, tolerates a great deal of ambiguity about the proper scope of police power. I refer to this model as communitarian, not only because it underlies most versions of “community policing,” but also because it is in tension with some of the commitments of political liberalism. While the state has long been characterized by its ability to employ coercive force in an organized fashion, the modern period has been marked by a much more ambitious attempt on the part of the state to assert a monopoly on the use of force in society. This ambition was clearly stated by John Locke, who thought that the primary feature of the social contract, through which the sovereign power of the state was constituted, was that individuals would surrender the natural right to the use of force in a punitive manner against one another.27 And yet, even though this ideal was clearly articulated in the 17th century, it did not become an institutional reality in Western societies until near the end of the 19th.28 Prior to that, the violence meted out by the state typically served as a supplement to the relatively high levels of retributive violence occurring in the informal social sphere (with the practice of dueling serving as the most high-profile example).29 The state did not attempt to prohibit this sort of violence until well into the 19th century, a process that went hand in hand with the development of policing.30 That this program of domestic pacification should coincide with the rise of modern policing is hardly an accident, since the state can only aspire to eliminate interpersonal violence once it has the institutional capacity not just to control it, but to offer at least a semi-credible replacement. Retributiveness is a powerful human impulse, which has so far proven resistant to all attempts at eradication. This means that when the forces of “law and order” appear unequal to the task of ensuring that the guilty are punished, members of the public will be inclined to take matters into their own hands. A significant fraction of crime is not first-order social deviance, but rather private vengeance in response to such deviance.31 As a result, the police are always subject to pressure from two directions. From “above” there are legislators and other state officials, who demand that the police enforce enacted laws, while from “below” there are members of civil society, who expect certain performances as a condition of their own willingness to refrain from engaging in private uses of force.32 This demand from below is what accounts for the widely noted phenomenon that the police, apart from the enforcement of statutory law, also act to maintain social order.33 Historically, this police power had an explicit constitutional justification in the relationship between the executive and other branches of government.34 European monarchs in the early modern period were taken to have two domains in which they could act without legislative authorization or oversight. Externally, there was the realm of foreign affairs, including military strategy and the prosecution of war, and internally, there was the “police”—in the original, archaic sense of the term—which involved promoting the well-being of the people and the good order of society.35 Democratic and republican revolutions led to the erosion of autonomous executive power and an expansion of legislative claims, in part because the legislature was seen as the conduit for popular sovereignty, which came to be regarded as the only legitimate basis of state power. This led to a dramatic expansion of the importance of statutory law, although the prerogative of the executive to conduct foreign affairs outside the scope of legislative control has largely been retained. The internal police power, however, fell into constitutional disrepute, leading to its preservation largely as an implicit police practice, given a veneer of legislative legitimacy through overcriminalization. The idea that the police enforce not just laws, but also the social order, sometimes evokes negative associations, and so it is important to be clear about its meaning. Social order, in the generic sociological sense, simply refers to the stability of the institutional systems governing everyday life.36 When private citizens reach the limit of what can be achieved through the informal enforcement mechanisms that are available to them, and, in particular, when they reach the limit of what can be achieved without recourse to force, they call the police. For the average patrol officer, this sort of call—to mediate a conflict between a landlord and tenant that is beginning to get out of hand, to intervene in a domestic dispute that has woken up the neighbors, to disperse a group of young people drinking in the park, to evict a bar patron who is refusing to leave, to deal with a mentally ill person who is scaring passengers at a bus stop—constitutes the overwhelming bulk of police work. When the police are obliged to use force in these circumstances, they appeal to statutory law in order to justify that use of force, despite the fact that the objectives they are pursuing, or the reasons for which they are using force, are often external to anything that is explicitly specified in any statute. As a result, modern policing winds up encompassing an eclectic list of responsibilities that defies easy summarization. (This is one of the reasons that police departments, despite possessing all the appurtenances of modern bureaucracy, are only superficially rule-governed organizations—most police decision-making is in fact driven by situational exigencies.)37 Part of the complexity is due to the fact that prohibiting civilians from engaging in uses of force has downstream effects (many of which were clearly unanticipated by social contract theorists who called for the prohibition). The recourse to force, or the availability of such recourse, has a structuring effect on other social practices, much of which escapes notice simply because, when effective, it results in force almost never having to be employed. For example, as Egon Bittner observed almost a half-century ago, there is a “profound misconception” about policing involved in the claim that, because there is substantial overlap between the tasks undertaken by police and social workers, the former could be replaced by the latter.38 The problem is not just that routine mental health and domestic disturbance calls have the potential to erupt into violence. It is also that the availability of recourse to force provides a form of decisiveness in action that is otherwise difficult to obtain. The central limitation of dialog and argumentation is that it can go on forever. At some point, however, discussion must cease and action must be taken. As Bittner emphasizes, citizens often call police in order to deal with situations that call for such decisive action.39 Furthermore, police intervention is often valued precisely for that reason (which explains, inter alia, why the police are involved in all emergency situations, regardless of the underlying nature of the problem). Because of these peculiarities of the role, the police stand in complex relationships of dependence with the communities that they serve. On the one hand, the effectiveness of legal regulation, and the capacity of the police to enforce statutory law, clearly depends on the quality of the underlying social order. This is a major theme in the work of Jane Jacobs, who emphasized that “no amount of police can enforce civilization when the normal, casual enforcement of it has broken down.”40 This is not just because police rely on members of the community to provide information, but also because the most important forms of deterrence are achieved through the informal social order. The real panopticon, Jacobs observed, are the “eyes on the street” of neighborhood residents, shopkeepers, and pedestrians, who create security simply by observing the comings and goings of others.41 By comparison, the police are extraordinarily limited in their ability to detect and deter crime. Yet, just as the police rely upon the informal social order to achieve compliance with the law (the way the visible part of the iceberg is supported by the larger bulk that rests below the waterline), members of the community depend upon the police to contribute to the maintenance and reproduction of the informal order, by intervening in situations that are beginning to get out of hand, or that escape the regulatory capacities of civil society. Police in these cases use force to supplement the informal, non-violent sanctions that are available to private individuals. This is where the most discretionary aspects of policing arise, because the patrol officer is forced to determine whether a situation is one that can be handled informally by the parties involved (perhaps once everyone is calmed down), or whether it requires formal intervention (and if so, what degree of sanction). Consider the case of individuals drinking in the park. In most jurisdictions, consumption of alcohol outside of a private home or a licensed public establishment is prohibited. And yet these laws are seldom enforced universally, but are merely used by police to break up groups whose behavior poses some other threat to public order (perhaps, but not necessarily, due to the influence of the alcohol consumed). The fact that some people are breaking the law by drinking in a public park says practically nothing about what the appropriate police response should be. Is it a young couple having a picnic, enjoying a glass of wine? Is it retired men from the neighborhood gathering in the afternoon? Is it a group of teenagers after dark? These are very different cases when it comes to assessing the disruptive potential of their behavior. Are they drinking socially, or are they getting drunk? And how are they drinking? Are they doing it discreetly, for their private enjoyment, or brazenly, in a way that shows disdain for the law? Is their presence intimidating, or interfering with other users of the park? And if intervention is warranted, should the alcohol merely be confiscated and the group ordered to disperse? Or should some or all be arrested? And once brought to the station, should they be released or detained overnight? An affront, as it is used here, is a challenge to the policeman's authority, control, and definition of the immediate situation. As seen by the police, an affront is simply a response on the part of the other which indicates to them that their position and authority in the interaction are not being taken seriously.43 Equally important is the role that judgments of respectability play in determining police response.45 Generally speaking, police are more likely to intervene, and to intervene punitively, when the person causing trouble belongs to a less respectable social category, just as they are more likely to take complaints seriously when they come from respectable individuals. The respectability of the “ordinary, law-abiding citizen” involves a generalized willingness to conform to social expectations and to defer to legitimate authority, and so is impaired by indications of either a history of, or propensity toward, social deviance. Thus the police focus their attention on individuals belonging to classes who pose the greatest threat to the social order. The most obvious targ
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
5.60%
发文量
17
期刊介绍: The Journal of Political Philosophy is an international journal devoted to the study of theoretical issues arising out of moral, legal and political life. It welcomes, and hopes to foster, work cutting across a variety of disciplinary concerns, among them philosophy, sociology, history, economics and political science. The journal encourages new approaches, including (but not limited to): feminism; environmentalism; critical theory, post-modernism and analytical Marxism; social and public choice theory; law and economics, critical legal studies and critical race studies; and game theoretic, socio-biological and anthropological approaches to politics. It also welcomes work in the history of political thought which builds to a larger philosophical point and work in the philosophy of the social sciences and applied ethics with broader political implications. Featuring a distinguished editorial board from major centres of thought from around the globe, the journal draws equally upon the work of non-philosophers and philosophers and provides a forum of debate between disparate factions who usually keep to their own separate journals.
期刊最新文献
Evaluating International Agreements: The Voluntarist Reply and Its Limits Issue Information The Journal of Political Philosophy Index, Volume 31 (2023) The challenge of policing minorities in a liberal society Noncompliance and the Demands of Public Reason
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