39 - Basis of Criminalization
39 - Basis of Criminalization
39 - Basis of Criminalization
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Role Name Affiliation
Module No. 41
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BASIS OF CRIMINALIZATION
1. Introduction
With its increasingly interesting coverage as savage for one while saviour for
discourse toward understanding criminal law in its given social - and albeit political-
offered the readership conceptual clarity over hitherto fuzz y areas of study to the
politics, economics and the law involved therein, were dealt with toward better
understanding on crime, criminal law and criminal justice as integra l parts of much
larger project named power arrangement for the time being in force. Also,
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taboo becomes diluted to set a particular behaviour free from the label of crimi nality
since the same is no longer in conflict with dominant normative order for the time
somewhere for some time may lack omnipresence of the same degree of proscription
2. Theorizing criminalization
of normative behavioural order; along with conviction that such defiance ought to get
defeated for maintenance of the given public order in the form of normative order
and one in defiance of the same deserves retribution of the state on behalf of its
citizenry. Also, implicit value judgment prevails over in public sphere to ascertain
that defiance ought to get labelled as crime. As mentioned earlier, crime appears
elastic construction rather than abstraction of something evil in its essence and quite
often than not played in the hands of dominant cult operative for furtherance of the
“The simplest way of defining crime is that it is an act that contravenes the
criminal law. This is nevertheless a problematic definition, for many
people break the criminal law but are not considered to be „criminals‟. In
English law, for example, some offences such as murder, thefts, or serious
assaults are described as mala in se or wrong in themselves. These are
often seen as „real‟ crimes in contrast to acts that are mala prohibita,
prohibited not because they are morally wrong but for the protection of the
public. Thus, the criminal law is used to enforce regulations concerning
public health or pollution not because they are morally wrong but because
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it is considered to be the most effective way of ensuring that regulations
are enforced.” (Burke: 2014)
No wonder that, since time immemorial, crime went culture specific across the
world. Even in the age of globalization, while the world stands fictionalized to get
reduced to a village vis-à-vis means and methods of connectivity, criminal law is still
governed by the rule of lex loci (law of the land) and thereby isolates its judicial
proceedings from the trendy web of globalization worldwide. Hue and cry over the
its given time and space. In its essence, therefore, criminalization is embedded in the
process of multiculturalism:
“Legal definitions also change over time and vary across culture. Th us, for
example in some countries, the sale and consumption of alcohol is a crime,
while, in others, the sale and consumption of opium, heroin or cannabis is
perfectly legal. … On the other hand, there has been a demand for other
activities to be criminalized, and in recent years these have included
„stalking‟, racially motivated crime and knowingly passing on the aids
virus. The way that crime is defined is therefore a social construction and
part of the political processes.” (Burke: 2014)
Besides presence of public policy in the realm of criminal law, by courtesy Holmes,
another factors plays critical role toward criminalization. Quite contrary to the
realism of Holmes, therefore, the life of law ought to be logic - besides experience- if
the same needs to pass the test of time in time ahead. Thus, to plead for objective
by draftsmen in practice:
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“Utilitarian arguments raise broader questions of moral philosophy and,
therefore, they resist refutation by laying bare their premises. There is
nothing hidden in Holmes‟ argument. “Public policy”, he tells us,
“sacrifices the individual to the common good”. An assault on this explicit
and coherent premise requires far more than the feeble claim that it is
unjust to sacrifice the individual to the common good. Unjust it may be,
but one needs to ground the imperative to do justice in a set of values at
least as compelling as the value of furthering the social good. The most
compelling argument offered to date is the Kantian thesis that the
categorical imperative requires us to respect persons as ends in themselves,
and we violate this imperative when we punish a person solely to further
interests of other persons.” (Fletcher: 2000)
social audit of the same appears deterrent enough not to overreach hitherto remnants
of peace and tranquillity whatever minimal the same may be. Also, political economy
marginal benefits out of captive isolation for these so called wrongdoers from
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family members suffer because a parent or spouse is in prison, or when an
offender has difficulty finding a job after release from prison.” (Green :
2009)
The basis of criminalization, therefore, deserves review to get rid of all these
lacunae; both in terms of its ontology and deontology as such. Rather than outreach
interpolation in crime and thereby leaving subjectivity apart to the best exte nt
plausible. The concept of crime ought to shrink to its bare minimal corpus and
thereby allow all stakeholders of the community move ahead without phobia of mens
rea syndrome.
3. Politicizing criminalization
members in public sphere. Consequently, failure to comply with the order created on
the basis of public consensus constitutes „crime‟ to get inserted into concerned
statute as part of criminal law. Thus, an underlying object of the consens us theory
may be traced back into control mechanism the society thereby exerts upon others
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“„Crime‟ is often viewed as an evil and criminal law as „good‟ and we
rarely bother to even think about the other view point. Such a belief about
„wrongness‟ of crime and „rightness‟ of all measures against crime, be it
the criminal code, the police, the prosecutor, the criminal courts, the
prisons and even crime stereotyping is accepted as gospel truth by the
society, by and large. The reasons for such unanimity, apart from our
traditional acceptance of „consensus‟, may lie in the „harm‟ potential of the
conduct or the imagined need for social solidarity that criminalization
provides. However, there always exists in every society a handful of
nonconformists for whom crime and criminal law are nothing more than a
set of power resource that the dominant classes use for their benefit. …
Crime, according to labelling theorists, has no inherent attributes; it
acquires meaning when it is labelled as a crime. Therefore, for every crime
you would have two opposite perspectives of labeller and that of the
labelled. The trend of a-moralization of crime does challenge the
traditional thinking about crime and criminal law, but its value for critical
understanding of crime and criminal law system remains enormous,
particularly for systems that are in the mode of change and reform.”
(Pande: 2007)
particular, perceived the conflict between and among competing interests out of class
rivalry as a thumb rule toward formulation of the criminal law. Accordingly, crime is
a product of conflict out of class struggle in a way or other and the law is meant to
carry forward interests of the dominant classes to the detriment of those of others
under the disguise of criminal law. Thus, to Marx, concept of crime is ridden with
“Like right, so crime, i.e., the struggle of the isolated individual agai nst
the predominant relations, is not the result of pure arbitrariness. On the
contrary, it depends on the same conditions as that domination. The same
visionaries who see in right and law the domination of some independently
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existing general will can see in crime the mere violation of right and law.
Hence the state does not exist owing to the dominant will, but the state,
which arises from the material mode of life of individuals, has also the
form of a dominant will.” (Delaney and Schwartz: 1968)
input while, as anti-establishment one, conflict theory has put its focus on coercive
character of the law as a political (read politicized) instrument played in the hands of
those who run the state apparatus behind the musk of consensus. Both contributes to
broad consensus in the gentry, the same hardly happens for subaltern strata.
Foucault grapples with the discursive nexus among diverse factors in its nitty -gritty
administration of criminal justice; the way together these three craft the neat texture
for state apparatus. To him, rather than offshoot of exclusion, criminality is inbuilt
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The craftsmanship of criminalization as product is subjected to manufacturing
process through media coverage of relevant fiction that may be far away from fact
(read truth). Even if departure from truth is not intentional, mere incidental departure
out of typical systemic reasoning seems enough for subversion of justice through
on diverse grounds out of mediated projection of the surreal truth while, at bottom,
criminalization, the state may and does decriminalize such an offence if the same
stands in consonance of its policy even though inflicts harm to the society at large.
There are illustrations where lawmakers compromise with their self -proclaimed
theory of social harm while state finds the same beneficial either for prospect of its
exchequer or otherwise. Thus, evil practices with far -reaching adverse impact on
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“While, historically, the criminalization of gambling may well have been
aligned with the interests of organized religion and the newly
industrialized state in a disciplined workforce, contemporary forms of
decriminalization and regulation protect the fiscal interests of the state. In
other words, the choice to categorize forms of gambling as non-criminal
protects the financial interests of the state. In this case, the real work being
done by the criminal law is that of consolidating a provincial monopoly
over expanding gambling revenues rather than controlling social harm.
Indeed, the decriminalization of gambling may have caused greater harm
since gambling addicts feed their addiction through theft, embezzlement
and fraud and leave their dependants to fend for themselves. … The state‟s
interest in profit by no means exhausts- indeed barely begins.” (Mosher
and Brockman: 2010)
A popular perception to get confused between society and state thereby stands
not void, between these institutions with occasional overlap between them inter se,
yet they stand apart with agenda of their own, even if the same inimical to another. A
On the contrary, a legal wrong is marked by lack of fideli ty (read legality) to the
increasingly widening face-off between society and state, hitherto gap between
criminalization.
decriminalization, state still continues to victimize those who are no longer criminals
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on the count of harm but on the count of governmentality archaic in its given time
damage the community and the state alike. Reformulation of general principles
Also, morality has had complicated underpinnings with criminalization. Thus, action
or omission cannot get criminalized by law only because the same is not in
consonance with moral standards in specific context of given time and space of the
society until there are protective interests recognized by law of the land for the time
being in force. At the same time, mere endorsement of the black letter law to get
action or omission criminalized lacks the legitimacy- despite the legality- since the
“How can one demarcate the legal world from the moral world? Certainly
they are not independent worlds. A rights-centred approach must give
reasons why in a process of pre-legal deliberation a right should be
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acknowledged to be protected by the criminal law. If such rea sons are
based on recognizing intersubjective and important human interests, the
line of argument necessarily interacts with moral reasoning: what really is
important to persons tends to figure prominently in the world of moral
duties and moral rights. But the point is to narrow the much larger field of
moral wrongs down to acts which are wrong in a legal -political sense,
meaning they violate interests which are so important to citizens that they
deserve to be accepted as protective rights.” (Hornle: 2014)
status, sexuality, etc. being few of them, where criminal jurisprudence lacks sound
reasoning in defence of law and practice. The way lower age of criminalization
stands compromised in India, HIV patients get victimized across the world, poverty
subjected to criminalization out of taboo, all these are insignia of pervasive vacuum,
if not void, vis-à-vis law-morality face-off inter se while poor subjects suffer the
“It is most paradoxical that on the one hand we speak of a distinct juvenile
justice/ youth justice system, yet bring in the issue of criminal
responsibility. … Perhaps the reason for this paradox lies in in the fact that
world-over, the juvenile justice system continues to be heavily dependent
upon the adult criminal justice system in matters of definition of
delinquency, pre-trial processes, adjudication and punitive responses. As a
consequence, though every system claims that they render juvenile justice
through a distinct and exclusive system, the reality is that the juvenile
justice system is, at best, an entailed system. But the fact cannot be denied
that over a period of past one hundred years the lower age of juvenile
justice has progressively increased.
… … …
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“The position of age in respect of total and partial exception from criminal
liability has remained unchanged over a period of nine decades during
which the system of juvenile justice has slowly evolved on the account of
the enactment of the Provincial Children Acts, the State Children Acts, the
Juvenile Justice Act, 1986 and the Juvenile Justice Act, 2000. In none of
the aforesaid statutory measures was the lower age bar for instituting
juvenile justice proceedings or the concept of „age of innocence‟ ever
debated. The focus remained on fixation of the upper age of 16 or 18 years
for claiming exclusion from the adult criminal justice system.” (Pande:
2014)
While the criminalization of tender age represents a universal concern, several others
disease, poverty, sexuality, may get illustrated to this end. In particular, HIV phobia
in search of fortune and that also free of cost. Consequently, the beneficiar y is
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“Today, when applying for welfare in the United States, many applicants
are photographed, finger-printed, drug-tested, interrogated, and asked to
prove paternity of children. Similarly, eligibility for public housing is
restricted or denied if the applicant has a criminal record, including
misdemeanours or a price lease violation. Further, local public housing
authorities, can be even more restrictive and evict occupants if a member
of their family or another person residing in- or in some cases visiting-
commits a crime, such as misdemeanour drug offence. Poverty, in other
words, is too often treated as a criminal offence.” (Dolan and Carr: 2015)
Also,
Likewise, despite consensual sexual life being private life and beyond public domain,
the law pokes its nose in the sexual orientation as well with criminalization of
majority rule:
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and on what count are left to whim and fancy of those driven by eventuality rather
seems a route to fill in the blank. Due to want of express mention, such morality but
appears a mere derivative and too remote to get translated to positive law of the land
as such:
… … …
… … …
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Last but not least, criminalization of thought constitutes an increasingly emerging
the state and at times with too crude tools and techniques to keep the same
undercover anyway. For this purpose, sedition and contempt of court- along with
concerned law and practice- resemble two sides of acoin to silence dissidence
suspicion of state apparatus thereof about alleged expression- is enough for one to
get victimized. Consequently, the same may and does open floodgate for witch -hunt
on the part of those in power to settle score and thereby eliminate political
opposition for electoral mileage. With regime change, s avage-victim relations may
reverse, may turn worse than ever before. What remains constant is criminalization,
nutshell, victimology concentrates its focus on the victim of the criminal and the
crime. Savage-victim relations pave the way for the newer jurisprudence while a
fallacy lies in the basis of criminalization that leaves the criminal vanquished (read
victimized) by the systemic subversion of public policy, law, practice and procedure
fault of his own. All these prompt travesty of justice and thereby defeats the purpose
of good governance while the state as a political institution is meant for the same.
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Basis of criminalization, therefore, constitutes a blind spot below the nose of law and
falls severely short to attract attention of the lawgivers and of the policymakers alike
potential to creates an interdisciplinary space for the people in power to grapple with
among them. Besides, power arrangement and given politics, economics, and the law
apparatus as well, even the judiciary is yet to transcend the given trend.
In the legislation landscape of India, the genre of crim inalization suffers from
paradox at several crossroads with case, ethnicity, gender, and other socio -economic
dynamics involved therein. Also, at times, there lies inbuilt contradistinction in the
legisprudence (the way V. R. Krishna Iyer referred to). For instance, while the
with men before the law, Indian Penal Code criminalizes the male partner alone in
adultery case that deals with sexual intercourse with the wife of ano ther man. Indeed,
construed as rape to be dealt with under Section 375 of the Code), culpa of the
female partner (despite being stakeholder of the offence for her consent by de fault)
stands ignored by the law under Section 497 of the Code in apparent departure from
commit suicide under Section 309 of the Code appears otiose while the
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underprivileged are left to hunger and consequent malnutrition, even starvation
Therefore, whether and how far the State has locus to criminalize poses a moot point
On this count, inventory of statutes includes, but cannot get limited to, the following:
1989
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All these are ridden with the paradox of their own. For instance, rather than the truth,
the law is content with evidence to prove the fact contended beyond reasonable
doubt. In several statutes, there is reversal of onus of proof to put the burden o n the
accused with rationale that may at ease get contested. The jurisprudence of
probation, despite its otherwise bona fide statutory intention behind, falls short of
being nonviolent in essence, there are better curative measures than imprisonment of
such otherwise talented- yet tainted- mind with potential to play critical role in
progressive development of the given market economy. Also, moral poverty vis -à-vis
followed by penology behind the bar. Resort to victimology has had potential to
serve the remedial purpose. Last but not least, legislation ought not to get (mis)used
as panacea to cure evil in every sundry case; nor criminalization that has had sanctity
of its own and to be used sparingly to cure what is otherwise incurable anyway. By
regular resort to last and final curative instrument, the sanctity of criminalization is
interest, care and caution must be taken on the part of state in democratic governance
that the jurisprudence may transcend given dominant discourse and thereby merge
6. Conclusion
law- criminal law in particular- as a social and albeit political instrument for state
apparatus to run dominant discourse the way joyriders run roller -coaster with little
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heed around. Criminalization with pervasive want of jurisprudence thereby leads to
wrath of administration of justice and penology of its own along with wide variation
in given time and space of the society concerned. Together these characteristics carry
forward the larger project of state governmentality under the disguise of l egal
fictions, e.g. collective interest, public order, social good, etc. while bona fide
plenty of pitfalls, state of affairs in criminal justice needs no mention to narrate the
by dialogue among diverse stakeholders of the society and its state inter se with more
judicious rather than mere judicial discourse in its essence. A democratic space with
the caucus- representation of many voices across the board- ought to minimize the
inbuilt fallacy of dominance lest the basis of criminalization may get reduced to
may not necessarily offer a fortified forum to secure criminalization from the wrath
of arbitrariness. The idea, however, lies in minimizing the menace and thereby
striving for perfection as a perennial ordeal. With the passage of time, basis of
criminalization may and does take volte-face to keep pace with ever-changing value
of time and space concerned. Therefore, more it changes its course, lesser it
ought to shot through the roof by default while there is little human agency (of guilt
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Reference:
<https://www.aidsunited.org/data/files/Site_18/AW2015-
4. Dolan, Karen and Carr,, Jodi L.,The Poor Get Prison: The Alarming Spread of
2015.
York, 2000.
Punish: The Birth of a Prison, Vintage Books, 2 nd ed., New York, 1991.
8. Green, Stuart P., Is There Too Much Criminal Law? Ohio State Journal of
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10. Hornle, Tatjana, Theories of Criminalization, Comments on A. P. Simester/
11. Marx, Karl, in Tim Delaney and Bob Schwartz (tr.), Karl Marx, The German
12. Mosher, Janet and Brockman, Joan (ed.), Constructing Crime: Contemporary
14. Pande, B. B., In the Name of Delhi Gang Rape: The Proposed Tough Juvenile
Justice Law Reform Initiative, Journal of National Law University Delhi, Vol.
15. United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)
93.
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