拆解新警务:一位前地区检察官的自白

IF 1.1 4区 社会学 Q2 LAW Washington Law Review Pub Date : 2012-07-23 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.436580
Alafair S. Burke
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引用次数: 2

摘要

本文试图重新构建一种新兴的学术辩论,即社区自治作为一种控制当地犯罪的手段和本身具有规范价值的目的的适当性。在现有的争论中,有一个新兴的、有影响力的“新自由裁量权”学者团体站在一边,他们为将自由裁量权授权给试图执行往往模棱两可的社会规范的警察辩护。这些学者认为,所谓“社区”对这种执法工作的支持和参与可以充分取代对警察自由裁量权的传统司法审查,特别是禁止含糊的刑法。辩论的另一方是传统的公民自由主义者,他们认为以规范为基础的警务和其背后的自治理论是几乎不加掩饰的多数主义形式。本文有两个主要目标。一个目标是利用作者作为社区检察官的经验来批评新的自由裁量权学者依赖可塑的社区概念来确定警察计划的合法性。第二个目标是在新的警务工作之间建立更有意义的区别。具体而言,本文主张区分民事主动与刑事主动。这种做法将保留现有的禁止含糊的刑法的规定。然而,它将允许城市实施需要警察自由裁量权的策略,只要这些策略避免传统的刑事调查、起诉和惩罚。这种做法将迫使城市要么对公共安全问题采取非传统的应对措施,要么接受传统的刑法和刑事诉讼规则的审查。
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Unpacking New Policing: Confessions of a Former Neighborhood District Attorney
This Article attempts to reframe a burgeoning scholarly debate about the appropriateness of neighborhood self-governance as both a means to local crime control and a normatively worthy end in itself. On one side of the existing debate stands an emerging and influential group of "new discretion" scholars, who defend the delegation of discretion to police officers attempting to enforce social norms that are often ambiguous. These scholars argue that the support and involvement of so-called "communities" in such law enforcement efforts can be an adequate substitute for traditional judicial scrutiny of police discretion, particularly the prohibition against vague criminal laws. On the other side of the debate are traditional civil libertarians who view norm-based policing and the theories of self-governance underlying it as thinly disguised forms of majoritarianism. This Article has two primary goals. One goal is to use the author's experience as a community-based prosecutor to critique the new discretion scholars' reliance upon malleable notions of community to determine the legality of police programs. The second goal is to develop a more meaningful distinction among new policing efforts. Specifically, this Article advocates a distinction between civil and criminal initiatives. This approach would retain the existing prohibition against vague criminal laws. However, it would permit cities to implement strategies requiring police discretion, as long as those strategies avoid traditional criminal investigation, prosecution, and punishment. Such an approach would force cities either to adopt nontraditional responses to public safety problems or to be scrutinized under the traditional rules governing criminal law and procedure.
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期刊介绍: Washington Law Review is a student-run and student-edited scholarly legal journal at the University of Washington School of Law. Inaugurated in 1919, it is the first legal journal published in the Pacific Northwest. Today, the Law Review publishes Articles and Comments of national and regional interest four times per year.
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