English 1102 Paper
English 1102 Paper
English 1102 Paper
This chart displays how specific of crimes assault and battery are. It is a type of injury to
the person, so it is a perfect case of when gender can matter in a crime.
Inequalities
After analyzing the data, there are very clear inequality trends. The most
noticeable were the ones between genders, as opposed to the decades.
4.5
4
3.5
3
2.5
2
1.5
1
0.5
0
Male
Female
For this essay, there was a focus on four categories: Whether the defendants were found
guilty, partially guilty or completely innocent, whether the crimes were of a sexual nature, and
whether the crimes involved police. There are obvious differences here, much larger than
expected.
Differences in Precedent
While it is clear that a kind of precedent was still followed in all these cases, it is
the different results that are so interesting. When analyzing a case, usually the prior cases that are
used for precedent purposes are listed or even described and explained. For this study, the goal
was to choose cases that could technically be compared for precedent, and while the different
results themselves are not necessarily proof of inequality, the way the conclusions were reached
can be.
A case of particular interest was the female case from the 80s. There was still a
conviction, but the defendant was not found to have the ill intentions that are often required for
a crime. The defendant had continuously ignored all the plaintiffs responses to his harassment,
in which she clearly displayed she did not return his feelings, so clearly there was a sort of ill
intention. Compared to the female cases of the 90s and 60s, this is particularly odd, as the
actual act of rape implies ill intent, but somehow acts of the same family that involve sexual
harassment do not imply intent.
The importance of intent is again prevalent in the female case of the 2000s, as the
intentions of an officer apparently do not matter when trying to prove excessive force. However,
in the comparable case of the 80s, intent was almost a requirement to prove a crime. Not only is
Conclusion
Inequality will continue to be a problem around the world, whether it be racial, gender, or
age etc., unless something is consciously done to stop it. While it is difficult to prove the cause
and effect relationship between sexist actions and intentions, seeing cases that can display this
definitely help show its existence. There is no easy solution for discrimination, but every chance
to expose it makes a difference. After all, the first step to change is admitting there is a problem.
With proof that there is discrimination in the law, specifically within gender in this case, it can
open doors to proving discrimination within other groups, like race.
References
Andrews v. Fowler, 98 F.3d 1069 (8th Cir. 1996).
Assault, Battery, and Related Crimes. (n.d.). Retrieved May 13, 2015, from Illinois Courts
Batista v. Weir, 340 F.2d 74 (3d Cir. 1965).
Caldeira, G. (1985). The Transmission of Legal Precedent: A Study of State Supreme Courts.
American Political Science Review, 79(1), 178-194.
Civil Liability for the Use of Pepper Spray (OC), Tear Gas, and Chemical Agents. (2014). AELE
Monthly Law Journal, 101-109.
Dimensions of Tort Liability [Chart]. (2012, December 29).
Eisenberg, M. (1999). Corporate Law and Social Norms. Columbia Law Review, 99(5), 12531292. Retrieved from Google Scholar database.
Grawey v. Drury, 567 F.3d 302 (6th Cir. 2009).
Heiner, R. (1986). Imperfect Decisions and the Law: On the Evolution of Legal Precedent and
Rules. The Journal of Legal Studies, 15(2), 227-261. Retrieved from Google Scholar
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O'Callahan v. Parker, 395 U.S. 258 (1969).
Owens v. Okure, 488 U.S. 235 (1989).