State Crime Flashcards

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1
Q

What are state crimes?

A

All forms of crime committed by or on behalf of states and governments

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2
Q

What are examples of state crimes?

A

genocide

torture

bribery and corruption by state officials

war crimes

state-corporate crimes

vote-rigging

detention without trial

Institutional racism by the state

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3
Q

What three reasons do Marxists give for believing that state crimes are the most serious types of crimes?

A

The scale of state crime

The state have the power to create and enforce laws - they can define their actions as legal

The state has a monopoly of violence - can define when violence is acceptable and when it should be considered an act of terrorism

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4
Q

What are examples of state crimes in the UK?

A

1970s - UK used ‘white noise’ to torture IRA suspects

Illegal detention and torture of Iraqis during Iraq War, 2003

Murder of Belfast solicitor Pat Finucane in 1989 by loyalists paramilitaries in collusion with MI5

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5
Q

What is semiology?

A

Study of harms

If an action by the state causes harm it should be considered a state crime regardless of whether it breaks state laws

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6
Q

What are natural rights?

A

Entitlements as a human being such as: right to life, liberty, free speech etc

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7
Q

What are civil rights?

A

Entitlements such as: the right to vote, education, privacy, fair trail etc.

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8
Q

What do the Schwendigers argue about human rights and state crimes?

A

Argue any action that breaches human rights should be considered a state crime, even if it’s legal

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9
Q

What three features did Kelman and Hamilton identify that produce crimes of obedience?

A

Authorisation - acts are ordered by those in authority, duty to obey orders

Routinisation - crime is routine, part of everyday work

Dehumanisation - the enemy is seen as sub-human, evil or a monster

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10
Q

What did Cohen argue the Spiral of Denial is?

A

Where states attempt to conceal or justify their human rights crimes, or re-label them as not a crime

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11
Q

What three stages did Cohen identify in the Spiral of Denial?

A

It didn’t happen - this continues until evidence demonstrates it did happen

It did happen, but it’s ‘something else’ - e.g. self-defence not murder

Acknowledging what really happened but justifying it - as part of a nations security or part of the war on terror

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12
Q

What five parts are there to Matza’s techniques of neutralisation?

A

Denial of victim - they re the terrorists, they are used to violence

Denial of injury - we are the real victims, not them

Denial of responsibility- I was obeying orders, doing my duty

Condemning the condemners - they are worse then us, they are the enemy

Appeal to higher loyalty - e.g. national security, defend the free world etc.

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