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Revision notes with simplified explanations to understand State Crimes quickly and effectively.
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The Seriousness of State Crime:
Its power means that it can conceal its crime, evade punishment for them and even avoid defining its own actions as criminal in the first place
State crime undermines the system of justice and public faith in it.
However the principle of national sovereignty - that states are the supreme authority within their own borders - makes it difficult for external authorities (e.g. EU) to intervene. This is despite the existence of international conventions and laws against acts such as genocide. 📝Examples of state crimes:
Torture and illegal treatment or punishment of citizens.
Gaddafi regime in Libya - overthrown in 2011
UK in the 1970s used 'white noise' to torture IRA suspects.
UK paid ÂŁ14 million in compensation to Iraqis who were illegally tortured and detained
US - Guantanamo Bay
War crimes: Israel has repeatedly been condemned for the deliberate targeting of civilian populations in the Israel-Palestine conflict. UK accused of war crimes in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
Corruption: organised stealing of money e.g. Egyptian dictator Mubarak - embezzled money
Assassination or 'targeted killing': Instruments of state power, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh - the Palestinian Hama commander was killed in Dubai in 2010
Genocide: systematic mass murder of people belonging to an ethnic, national or religious group, Natzi's against the Jews, Rwanda genocide of 1994
State sponsored terrorism: the state itself carrying out terrorist acts or supporting others doing it. The US supported illegal rebel groups against elected regimes e.g. in Central and South America.
Problems with defining state crimes:
Different definitions of State crime:
A03: However, using state explanation of crime is inadequate and ignores the fact that the state can manipulate the definition.
📝For example during Natzi Germany, laws were legalised permitting it to compulsorily sterilise the disabled.
📝For example, these harms would include state-facilitated poverty.
This definition prevents states from ruling themselves 'out of court', by making laws that allow them to misbehave. It also creates a single standard that can be applied to different states to identify which ones are most harmful to human or environmental well-being.
A03: critics argue that the harm definition is very vague - how much harm must occur before an act is defined as a crime? Who decides what counts as harm?
A03: Cohen criticises Schwendinger arguing that crimes like torture are explicitly open crimes, whilst economic exploitation is more hidden and is not a self-evident crime.
The Authoritarian Personality:
-Adorno et al (1950) identify an 'authoritarian personality' – includes civilians willing to obey the orders of superiors without question. -They argue that at the time of WWII, many Germans had punitive personality types because of their disciplined socialisation.
-Some argue those who commit torture/genocide must be psychopaths – but research shows they are no different to normal human beings.
A02: Adolf Eichmann was an SS officer in Nazi Germany. He was placed in charge of the logistics of Hitler's final solution--the mass extermination of Jews -so Eichmann was responsible for the murder of millions of people.
Crimes of obedience
State crimes are crimes of conformity because they require obedience from a higher authority – the state or its representative. Researchers suggest that many people are willing to obey authority even when this involves harming others – sociologists argue that such actions are part of a role into which individuals are socialised.
Kelman & Hamilton (1989) identify 3 general features that produce crimes of obedience:
Authorisation = when acts are ordered or approved by those in authority, normal moral principles are replaced by the duty to obey.
Routinisation = Once the crime has been committed, there is a strong pressure to turn the act into a routine that individuals can perform in a detached manner.
Dehumanisation = when the enemy is portrayed as sub-human, normal principles of morality do not apply.
Bauman - the Holocaust was made possible by these processes. -My Lai Massacre in Vietnam: 400 civilians killed by American soldiers, 26 soldiers charged and 1 convicted.
Culture of Denial:
Alvarez (2010) = recent years have shown the growing impact of the international human rights movement e.g. Amnesty International = puts pressure on states
-Cohen argues that while dictatorships generally simply deny committing human rights abuses, democratic states have to legitimate their actions in more complex ways. In doing so, their justifications follow a three-stage 'spiral of state denial':
A02 - Stage 1 example
-US government's active collusion in the cover-up of the 1981 El Mozote massacre in El Salvador. -The Salvadoran Army killed more than 800 civilians in the civil war
-At the same time as claiming that its El Salvadoran ally was making every effort to improve its human rights record (and therefore was eligible for aid to be certified by Congress), US Embassy officials in El Salvador and the State Department were involved in baroque manoeuvres to deny what they knew about the massacre
Cohen examines the ways in which states and their officials deny or justify their crimes. He draws on the work of Sykes and Matza, who identify 5 neutralisation techniques that delinquents use to justify their deviant behaviour.
Why is state crime hard to research: -
Governments adopt strategies of denial to either deny or justify their actions or reclassify them as something else
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