Justice before Expediency: Robust Intuitive Concern for Rights Protection in Criminalization Decisions
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Springer
Date
2023-01-28Referencia bibliográfica
Bystranowski, P., Hannikainen, I.R. Justice before Expediency: Robust Intuitive Concern for Rights Protection in Criminalization Decisions. Rev.Phil.Psych. (2023). [https://doi.org/10.1007/s13164-023-00674-0]
Sponsorship
National Science Centre, Poland 2016/23/N/HS5/00928; European Research Council (ERC) under the H2020 European Research Council research and innovation program 805498; Faculty of Philosophy under the Strategic Programme Excellence Initiative at Jagiellonian University; Ministry of Science and Innovation, Spain (MICINN) Spanish Government PID2020-119791RA-I00Abstract
The notion that a false positive (false conviction) is worse than a false negative
(false acquittal) is a deep-seated commitment in the theory of criminal law. Its most
illustrious formulation, the so-called Blackstone’s ratio, affirms that “it is better
that ten guilty persons escape than that one innocent suffer”. Are people’s evaluations
of criminal statutes consitent with this tenet of the Western legal tradition? To
answer this question, we conducted three experiments (total N = 2492) investigating
how people reason about a particular class of offenses—proxy crimes—known to
vary in their specificity and sensitivity in predicting actual crime. By manipulating
the extent to which proxy crimes convict the innocent and acquit those guilty of a
target offense, we uncovered evidence that attitudes toward proxy criminalization
depend primarily on its propensity toward false positives, with false negatives exerting
a substantially weaker effect. This tendency arose across multiple experimental
conditions—whether we matched the rates of false positives and false negatives or
their frequencies, whether information was presented visually or numerically, and
whether decisions were made under time pressure or after a forced delay—and was
unrelated to participants’ probability literacy or their professed views on the purpose
of criminal punishment. Despite the observed inattentiveness to false negatives,
when asked to justify their decisions, participants retrospectively supported their
judgments by highlighting the proxy crime’s efficacy (or inefficacy) in combating
crime. These results reveal a striking inconsistency: people favor criminal policies
that protect the rights of the innocent, but report comparable concern for their expediency
in fighting crime.