The Liberty to Denounce: Ancient and Modern
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Description
What is wrong, legally and morally, with a two-track judicial system, where most suspects are tried in ordinary courts but where individuals who are alleged to be especially dangerous are hauled before extraordinary civilian tribunals or “military commissions” with radically reduced procedural guarantees? Benjamin Constant asked and answered this question, with exemplary clarity, two hundred years ago: “It means declaring men convicted ahead of time, even when they are only accused.” No infallible external signs distinguish the guilty from the innocent. This is why legal procedures must not be casually circumvented, for they remain “the best methods available for ascertaining the facts.” That political authorities that claim to be curtailing due-process rights for the sake of “public safety” are guilty of “absurdity,” if not outright mendacity, was another one of his lifelong convictions. Even more remarkably, he explained in persuasive detail how the system of criminal justice is inevitably perverted when it is assigned the task not of punishing past crimes but of preventing future ones. “The pretext of preventing future crimes,” he argues, is wholly incompatible with a free society for the simple reason that “the possibility of committing a criminal act is an inherent feature of individual liberty.” As these remarkable passages suggest, Constant’s lucid writings on judicial power remain eerily relevant to twenty-first-century concerns. The present chapter focuses on a theme closely related to those just mentioned and one that speaks equally directly to legal and political difficulties of the present.
Source Publication
The Cambridge Companion to Constant
Source Editors/Authors
Helena Rosenblatt
Publication Date
2009
Recommended Citation
Holmes, Stephen, "The Liberty to Denounce: Ancient and Modern" (2009). Faculty Chapters. 796.
https://gretchen.law.nyu.edu/fac-chapt/796
