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The Use and Abuse of the Cultural Defense
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2014
Abstract
Invoking a cultural defense has become a popular but controversial legal strategy. After explaining that the scope of the cultural defense is broader than is often understood and that it is used to mitigate punishment, create exemptions from policies, and increase the size of damage awards, I identify the normative principles that justify such a defense. Although it may be defended as a matter of principle, if this defense has any chance of being formally adopted, policies must be established to prevent its misuse. I propose a cultural defense test and show how it could be applied appropriately in a few cases. Following the analysis of its proper use, I demonstrate the potential for abuse by showing how in particular cases cultural arguments failed to meet the requirements of the cultural defense test I propose. Finally I recommend ways to assist courts in finding cultural experts who can authenticate the cultural claims.
Résumé
Invoquer la défense culturelle est devenue une stratégie judiciaire populaire bien que controversée. Expliquant dans un premier temps que la portée de la défense culturelle est plus vaste que généralement comprise et qu'elle sert aussi bien à atténuer des sentences, à créer des exceptions à des politiques établies qu'à augmenter les montants de dommage et intérêts accordés, j'identifie ensuite les principes normatifs qui justifient ce type de défense. Même si elle peut être appuyée fondé sur des principes, si la défense culturelle a une chance d'être adoptée formellement, des politiques doivent être établies pour prévenir des abus. Je propose des critères d'application de la défense culturelle qui sont illustrés par quelques cas. La présentation d'exemples où la défense culturelle est appropriée est suivie d'une démonstration des abus potentiels, à partir de cas particuliers dans lesquels les arguments culturels avancés ne remplissaient pas les critères du test proposé. L'article se termine sur des recommandations pour assister les tribunaux à trouver les experts qui peuvent authentifier les requêtes culturelles.
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- Copyright © Canadian Law and Society Association 2005
References
1 The debate over the cultural defense is taking place in countries across the globe such as Australia, Belgium, Canada, England, the Netherlands, South Africa, and the United States. See, e.g. Van Broeck, Jeroen, “Cultural Defence and Culturally Motivated Crimes (Cultural Offences)” (2001) 9 Eur. J. Crime, Crim. L. & Crim. J. 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Bronitt, Simon & Amirthalingam, Kumaralingam, “Cultural Blindness: Criminal Law in Multicultural Australia” (1996) 21:2Alt. L.J. 58Google Scholar; Poulter, Sebastian, Ethnicity, Law, and Human Rights: The English Experience (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998)Google Scholar; Phillips, Anne, “When Culture Means Gender: Issues of Cultural Defence in English Courts” (2003) 66 Mod. L. Rev. 510CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Wong, Charmaine M., “Good Intentions, Troublesome Applications: The Cultural Defence and Other Uses of Cultural Evidence in Canada” (1999) 42:2–3Crim. L.Q. 367Google Scholar; Woo, Deborah, “Cultural ‘Anomalies’ and Cultural Defenses: towards an integrated theory of homicide and suicide” (2004) 32 Int'l J. Soc. L. 279CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Carstens, Pieter A., “The Cultural Defense in Criminal Law: South African Perspectives” (2004) 2 De Jure 312.Google Scholar See also the essays on Folk Law in Conflict in Renteln, Alison Dundes & Dundes, Alan, eds., Folk Law: Essays in the Theory and Practice of Lex Non Scripta (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1995).Google Scholar
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5 Ibid., at art. 27.
6 The Human Rights Committee issues policy statements clarifying the scope of rights in the form of general comments. For its interpretation of art. 27, see General Comment No. 23: The rights of minorities (Art. 27), OHCHR, 50th sess., CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/Add.5 (1994).
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14 Krasniqi, supra note 12.
15 Cultural Defense, supra note 3 at 59. Touching children in the genital area should probably be discouraged not only because parents will encounter difficulty with the law, but also because children caught between two cultures may feel uncomfortable if they realize it is considered inappropriate conduct in the larger society. But incarcerating parents or breaking up families are illegitimate means of inculcating new values.
16 It is a partial excuse that reduces a charge of murder to one of manslaughter.
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35 The appellate court said that when retried the defendants would have “… the obligation of showing that they are in fact Rastafarians and that the use of marijuana is a part of the religious practice of Rastafarians” (Bauer, supra note 33 at 1559).
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38 “As to the counts relating to conspiracy to distribute, possession with intent to distribute, and money laundering, the religious freedom of the defendants was not invaded. Nothing before us suggests that Rastafarianism would require this conduct.” (Ibid., at 1559).
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