吸毒和酗酒对原住民和非土著被告量刑的影响

IF 2.1 3区 社会学 Q1 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY Race and Justice Pub Date : 2022-02-21 DOI:10.1177/21533687221078967
M. Velazquez, Theresa Petray, Debra Miles
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文研究了个人使用非法药物和酒精的方式,将其视为解释犯罪的减轻或加重因素。我们考虑了在澳大利亚昆士兰北部最高法院和地区法院因涉及非法药物使用、酒精使用、毒品犯罪和暴力的犯罪而出庭的人对这些因素的不同理解。法庭观察的定性分析是通过批判性种族理论来理解的。我们的调查结果表明,法律从业者在讨论非土著被告时,主要将个人使用非法药物作为不利情况的指标。在这些病例中,药物使用与其他不利因素有关,如精神健康状况不佳、身体疼痛和创伤。相比之下,酗酒主要被认为是原住民被告的一个加重处罚因素,法律从业者将其视为与暴力犯罪有关的个人缺陷,并掩盖了许多原住民被告所经历的相互关联的不利因素。这反映了社会对原住民的态度,强化了对犯罪模式的个人主义解释,并指出了昆士兰高等法院结构过程中根深蒂固的制度性种族主义,这种种族主义继续深刻影响原住民。
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The Impacts of Drug and Alcohol use on Sentencing for First Nations and Non-Indigenous Defendants
This paper examines the ways personal use of illicit substances and alcohol are constructed as either mitigating or aggravating factors to explain offending. We consider the differential constructions of these factors for people who appear in supreme and district courts in northern Queensland, Australia, for offences involving illicit substance use, alcohol use, drug-related offences, and violence. Qualitative analysis of courtroom observations is understood through the lens of Critical Race Theory (CRT). Our findings reveal that personal use of illicit substances was primarily constructed by legal practitioners as an indicator of disadvantaged circumstances when discussing non-Indigenous defendants. In these cases, drug use was connected to other disadvantages such as poor mental health, physical pain, and trauma. In contrast, alcohol use was primarily raised as an aggravating factor for First Nations defendants, constructed by legal practitioners as a personal flaw linked to violent offending, and overshadowed the interrelated disadvantages that many First Nations defendants experience. This reflects social attitudes about First Nations people, reinforces individualistic explanations for offending patterns, and points to the institutional racism embedded in the structural processes of Queensland's higher courts that continues to profoundly impact First Nations people.
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来源期刊
Race and Justice
Race and Justice Multiple-
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
19.00%
发文量
37
期刊介绍: Race and Justice: An International Journal serves as a quarterly forum for the best scholarship on race, ethnicity, and justice. Of particular interest to the journal are policy-oriented papers that examine how race/ethnicity intersects with justice system outcomes across the globe. The journal is also open to research that aims to test or expand theoretical perspectives exploring the intersection of race/ethnicity, class, gender, and justice. The journal is open to scholarship from all disciplinary origins and methodological approaches (qualitative and/or quantitative).Topics of interest to Race and Justice include, but are not limited to, research that focuses on: Legislative enactments, Policing Race and Justice, Courts, Sentencing, Corrections (community-based, institutional, reentry concerns), Juvenile Justice, Drugs, Death penalty, Public opinion research, Hate crime, Colonialism, Victimology, Indigenous justice systems.
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