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Retribution
and Reconciliation
by David A. Crocker
In his recent book, No Future Without Forgiveness, Archbishop
Desmond Tutu evaluates the successes and failures of the South African Truth and
Reconciliation Commission (TRC). The chair of the TRC, Tutu defends the Commissions
granting of amnesty to wrongdoers who revealed the truth about their pasts, and he lauds
those victims who forgave their abusers. While recognizing that a country must reckon with
its past evils rather than adopt "national amnesia," Tutu nevertheless rejects
what he calls the "Nuremberg trial paradigm." He believes that victims should
not press charges against those who violated their rights, and the state should not make
the accused "run the gauntlet of the normal judicial process " and impose
punishment on those found guilty.
Tutu offers practical and moral
arguments against applying the Nuremberg precedent to South Africa. On the practical
side, he expresses the familiar view that if trials were the only means of reckoning with
past wrongs, then proponents of apartheid would have thwarted efforts to negotiate a
transition to democratic rule. The South African court system, moreover, biased as it was
toward apartheid, would hardly have reached just verdicts and sentences. Tutu points out
that trials are inordinately expensive, time-consuming, and labor intensivediverting
valuable resources from such tasks as poverty alleviation and educational reform. In the
words of legal theorist Martha Minow, prosecution is "slow, partial, and
narrow." Rejecting punishment, Tutu favors the TRCs approach in which rights
violators publicly confess the truth while their victims respond with forgiveness.
Powerful practical reasons may explain the decision to spare oppressors from trials and
criminal sanctions. But, as I shall show, no moral
argumentat least neither of the two that Tutu providesjustifies rejection
of the Nuremberg paradigm.
The Argument Against Vengeance
In the first of these moral
arguments, the argument against vengeance, Tutu offers three premises for the conclusion
thatat least during South Africas transition legal punishment of those who
violate human rights is morally wrong. He asserts: (i) punishment is retribution, (ii)
retribution is vengeance, and (iii) vengeance is morally wrong.
Although Tutu understands that forgiveness may be appropriate for
any injury, at one point he claims that amnesty provides only a temporary way for
South Africa to reckon with past wrongs. He provides no criteria, however, to determine at
what point punishment for crimes should be reinstated, and he also offers no reasons that
punishment is justified in normal times. Further, one might wonder on what grounds
Tutu would deny exoneration for those who committed human rights violations after the
fall of apartheid and who now wish to exchange full disclosure of their wrongdoing for
amnesty.
Is Punishment
Retribution?
Consider the first of Tutus
three premises in his argument against punishment. While Tutu assumes that punishment is
no more than retribution, he fails to define what he understands by
"punishment." He does not, for example, explicitly identify legal punishment as
state-administered and intentional infliction of suffering or deprivation on wrongdoers.
Tutu also says almost nothing about the nature and aims of legal punishment. He
fails to distinguish court-mandated punishment from therapeutic treatment and social
shaming, among other societal responses to criminal conduct. Tutu does not consider the
various roles that punishment may play such as to control or denounce crime,
isolate the dangerous, rehabilitate perpetrators, or give them their just deserts
and whether these roles justify the criminal sanction. He does at one point say that the
"chief goal" of "retributive justice" is "to be punitive."
Tutu apparently takes it as a given that "punishment" means
"retribution" and that the nature of legal punishment is retributive.
Tutu does at times concede that
trials have two other aims, at least during South Africas transition: vindicating
the rights of victims and generating truth about the past. Again and again, Tutu states
that victims of past wrongs have the rightat least a constitutional right and
perhaps also a moral one to press criminal charges against and seek restitution
from those that abused them. He also extols the "magnanimity" of individuals
who, like former South African President Nelson Mandela, have not exercised this right but
are willing to forgive and seek harmony (ubuntu) with their oppressors. These
statements suggest that Tutu regards legal punishment not merely as a means to retribution
but also as a way to affirm and promote the rights of victims.
Tutu also endorses the credible
threat of punishment as a social tool to encourage perpetrators to tell the truth about
their wrongdoing. The TRC did not grant a blanket amnesty to human rights violators or
pardon all those convicted of rights abuses committed during apartheid. Instead the TRC
offered amnesty to individual perpetrators only if (i) their disclosures
were complete and accurate, (ii) their violations were politically motivated, and (iii)
their acts of wrongdoing were proportional to the ends violators hoped to achieve.
According to Tutu, individuals who fail to fulfill any of the three conditions have a
strong incentive to apply for amnesty and reveal the whole truth. It is precisely because
violators are threatened with trial and eventual punishment that they realize that making
no application for amnesty or lying about their wrongdoing is too risky. Without such a
threat of trial and punishment, the TRC is unlikely to have had the number of perpetrators
who did come forward to confess gross wrongdoing.
But Tutu cannot have it both ways. He cannot both reject actual
punishment and still defend the threat of punishment as efficacious in dispelling lies and
generating truth. Hence, Tutus acceptance of a "threat to punish"
practically commits him to a nonretributive and consequentialist role for punishment,
since without occasionally making good on the threat to punish, such a threat loses
credibility.
Tutu does not bring enough precision to the term
"retribution." He seems, at points, simply to identify retribution with legal
punishment. Instead, one must understand retribution as one important rationale or justification
for and a constraint upon punishment. Proponents of the retributive theory of
punishment offer a variety of competing accounts, but all agree that any retributive
theory minimally requires that punishment must be "backward looking in important
respects." That is, justice requires that a crime is punishable as, in the words of
lawyer and legal theorist Lawrence Crocker, "a matter of the criminal act, not the
future consequences of conviction and punishment." These future consequences
might comprise such good things as deterrence of crime, rehabilitation of criminals, or
promotion of reconciliation. For the proponent of retributivism, however, the infliction
of suffering or harm, something normally prohibited, is justified because of and in
proportion to what the criminal has done antecedently. Only those found
guilty should be punished, and their punishment should fit (but be no more than) their
crime.
Some supporters of the retributive theory of punishment, assert,
moreover, that only (and perhaps all) wrongdoers deserve punishment, and the amount
or kind of punishment they deserve must fit the wrong done. Harvard philosopher Robert
Nozick explains desert in terms of both the degree of wrongness of the act and the
criminals degree of responsibility for it. Retribution as a justification for
punishment requires that wrongdoers should get no more than (and perhaps no less than)
their "just deserts."
Is Retribution Vengeance?
The second premise in Tutus argument against
punishment that retribution is (nothing but) vengeance or revenge is flawed
as well. Given Nozicks understanding of retribution as "punishment inflicted as
deserved for a past wrong," is Tutu right to treat retribution and revenge or
vengeance as equivalent? Both retribution and revenge share, as Nozick puts it, "a
common structure." They inflict harm or deprivation for a reason. Retribution and
vengeance harm those who in some sense have it coming to them. Following Nozicks
brief but suggestive analysis, I propose that there are at least six ways in which
retribution differs from revenge.
Retribution addresses a wrong. First, as Nozick
observes, "retribution is done for a wrong, while revenge may be done for an injury
or slight and need not be done for a wrong." I interpret Nozick to mean retribution
metes out punishment for a crime or other wrongdoing while revenge may be exacted for what
is merely a slight, an unintended injury, an innocent gaze, or shaming in front of
ones friends.
Retribution is constrained. Second, Nozick also correctly
sees that in retribution there exists some "internal" upper limit to punishment
while revenge is essentially unlimited. Lawrence Crocker concurs: "an absolutely
central feature of criminal justice" is to place on each offense "an upper limit
on the severity of just punishment." This limitation "is the soul of retributive
justice." It is morally repugnant to punish the reluctant foot soldier as severely as
the architects, chief implementers, or "middle management" of atrocities.
Retribution provides both a sword to punish wrongdoers and a shield to protect them from
more punishment than they deserve. In contrast to punishment, revenge is wild,
"insatiable," unlimited. After killing his victims, an agent of revenge may
mutilate them and incinerate their houses. As Nozick observes, if the avenger does
restrain himself, it is done for "external" reasons having nothing to do with
the rights or dignity of his victims. His rampage may cease, for instance, because he
tires, runs out of victims, or intends to exact further vengeance the next day.
Notably, Martha Minow and others
subscribe to a different view. Minow suggests that retribution is a kind of
vengeance, but curbed by the intervention of neutral parties and bound by the rights of
individuals and the principles of proportionality. Seen in this light, in retribution
vengeful retaliation is tamed, balanced, and recast. It is now a justifiable, public
response that stems from the "admirable" self-respect that resents injury by
others.
While Minows view deserves
serious consideration, Nozick, I think, gives us a picture of vengeanceand its
fundamental difference from retribution that better matches our experience.
Precisely because the agent of revenge is insatiable, limited neither by prudence
nor by what the wrongdoer deserves, revenge is not something admirable that goes wrong.
The person seeking revenge thirsts for injury that knows no (internal) bounds, has no
principles to limit penalties. Retribution, by contrast, seeks not to tame
vengeance but to excise it altogether. Retribution insists that the response not be
greater than the offense; vengeance insists that it be no less and if possible more. Minow
attempts to navigate "between vengeance and forgiveness," but she does so in a
way that makes too many concessions to vengeance. She fails to see unequivocally that
retribution has essential limits. Vengeance has no place in the courtroom or, in fact, in
any venue, public or private.
Retribution is impersonal. Third, vengeance is personal in
the sense that the avenger retaliates for something done antecedently to her or her group.
In contrast, as Nozick notes, "the agent of retribution need have no special or
personal tie to the victim of the wrong for which he exacts retribution." Retribution
demands impartiality and rejects personal bias while partiality and personal animus
motivate the "thirst for revenge."
The figure of Justice blindfolded (so as to remove any prejudicial
relation to the perpetrator or victim) embodies the commonplace that justice requires
impartiality. Justice is blind that is, impartial in the sense that she
cannot distinguish between people on the basis of familiarity or personal ties. This not
to say, however, that justice is impersonal in the sense that she neglects to consider an
individuals traits or conduct relevant to the case. Oddly, Tutu suggests that the
impartiality or neutrality of the state detracts from its ability to deal with the crimes
of apartheid. He defends the TRC because it is able to take personal factors into account.
He writes:
One might go on to say that perhaps justice fails to be done only
if the concept we entertain of justice is retributive justice, whose chief goal is to be
punitive, so that the wronged party is really the state, something impersonal, which has
little consideration for the real victims and almost none for the perpetrator.
Although justice eliminates bias
from judicial proceedings, it may be fair only if it takes certain personal factors into
account. Because Tutu confuses the impersonality or neutrality of the law with an
indifference to the personal or unique aspects of a case, Tutu insists that judicial
processes and penalties give little regard to "real victims" or their
oppressors.
Retribution takes no satisfaction. A fourth distinction
between retribution and revenge concerns the "emotional tone" that accompanies
or the feelings that motivate the infliction of harm. Agents of revenge,
claims Nozick, get pleasure, or we might say "satisfaction," from their
victims suffering. Agents of retribution may either have no emotional response at
all or take "pleasure at justice being done." (Adding to Nozicks account
and drawing on the work of political theorists Jeffrie Murphy and Jean Hampton, I should
add that a "thirst for justice" maybut need not arise from moral
outrage over and hatred of wrongdoing.)
Retribution is principled. Fifth, Nozick claims that what
he calls "generality" is essential to retribution but may be absent from
revenge. By this term, Nozick means that agents of retribution who inflict deserved
punishment for a wrong are "committed to (the existence of some) general principles
(prima facie) mandating punishment in other similar circumstances."
Retribution rejects collective guilt. Nozick, I believe,
helpfully captures the main contrasts between retribution and revenge. To these, I add a
sixth distinction. Mere membership in an opposing or offending group may be
the occasion of revenge, but not of retribution. Retributive justice differs from
vengeance, in other words, because it extends only to individuals and not to the groups to
which they belong. In response to a real or perceived injury, members of one ethnic group
might, for instance, take revenge on members of another ethnic group. However, the state
or international criminal court could properly mete out retribution only to those individuals
found guilty of rights abuses, not to all members of the offending ethnic
group. Since collective guilt has no place in an understanding of retributive justice,
revenge and retribution should not be conceived as equivalent. Tutu makes precisely this
mistake.
Following the Hegelian dictum "first distinguish, then
unite," Nozick promptly concedes, as he should, that vengeance and retribution can
come together in various ways. Particular judicial and penal institutions may combine
elements of retribution and of revenge. The Nuremberg trials, arguably, were retributive
in finding guilty and punishing some Nazi leaders, punishing some more than others, and
acquitting those whom it found not guilty as charged. But Tutu is right to say that the
Nuremberg precedent was contaminated, compromised by revenge or "victors
justice." As he notes, Nuremberg used exclusively allied judges and failed to put any
allied officers in the dock. However, Tutu neglects to affirm the achievements of
Nuremberg: it vindicated the notion of individual responsibility for crimes against
humanity and defeated the excuse that one was "merely following orders." One
reason that Nuremberg is an ambiguous legacy is that it had both good (retributive) and
bad (vengeful) elements. In no case can one accept Tutus second premise that
retribution is nothing but vengeance.
What of Tutus third premise that vengeance is morally wrong?
When I shift the focus from vengeance to the agent of revenge, I accept Tutus
premise. Unlike the agent of retribution, the agent of revenge does wrong, or at least he
is morally blameworthy. He retaliates and inflicts an injury without regard to what the
person impartially deserves. If the penalty happens to fit the crime, it is by
luck; the agent of revenge is still blameworthy since he gave no consideration to desert,
impartiality, or generality. If, as is more likely given the limitless nature of revenge,
the penalty is more excessive than the crime, the agent of revenge is not only culpable
but also his act is morally wrong. Nonetheless, Tutus overall argument against
vengeance is unsound since two of its premises are not acceptable.
The Reconciliation Argument
Tutu proposes a second moral argument against the "Nuremberg
trial paradigm" for South Africas transition and others like it. Tutu rejects
retributive justice on the grounds that it prevents or impedes reconciliation. He
understands reconciliation as "restorative justice," the highest if not the only
goal in South Africas reckoning with past wrongs. Tutu defends amnesty and
forgiveness as the best means to promote reconciliation. What does Tutu mean by the vague
and not infrequently contested term "reconciliation" and its synonym
"restorative justice"? Tutu explicitly defines restorative justice (in contrast
to retributive justice) as reconciliation of broken relationships between perpetrators and
victims:
We contend that there is another kind of justice, restorative
justice, which was characteristic of traditional African jurisprudence. Here the central
concern is not retribution or punishment. In the spirit of ubuntu, the
central concern is the healing of breaches, the redressing of imbalances, the restoration
of broken relationships, a seeking to rehabilitate both the victim and the perpetrator,
who should be given the opportunity to be reintegrated into the community that he has
injured by his offense.
Although Tutu in this passage
uncharacteristically leaves room for punishment, he understands the "central
concern" of restorative justice as the reconciliation of the wrongdoer with his
victim and with the society he has injured. The wrongdoing has "ruptured"
earlier relationships or failed to realize the ideal of "ubuntu." Ubuntu,
a term from the Ngunui group of languages, refers to a kind of "social
harmony" in which people are friendly, hospitable, magnanimous, compassionate, open,
and nonenvious. Although Tutu recognizes the difficulty of translating the concept, it
seems to combine the Western ideal of mutual beneficence, the disposition to be kind to
others, with the ideal of community solidarity.
Tutu regards "social harmony" or "communal
harmony" as the summum bonum, or highest good. He concedes that South Africa
must in some way "balance" a plurality of important values "justice,
accountability, stability, peace, and reconciliation." Whatever "subverts"
or corrodes social harmony, how-ever, "is to be avoided like the plague."
Presumably, whatever maximizes social harmony is morally commendable and even obligatory.
Tutu may believe that ubuntu presents so lofty an ideal
that no one would question its justification or importance. In any case, he offers little
argument for its significance or supremacy. He does seek to support it by calling
attention to its African origins. He also remarks that, while altruistic, ubuntu is
also "the best form of self-interest," for each individual benefits when the
community benefits.
As it stands, neither defense is persuasive. The moral disvalue of
apartheid, also a South African concept, has nothing to do with its origins. Similarly,
the geographical origin of ubuntu does not ensure its reasonableness. Further,
although individuals often benefit from harmonious community relationships, the community
also at times demands excessive sacrifices from individuals. Moreover, dissent or moral
outrage may be justified even though it disrupts friendliness and social harmony.
Tutu offers practical objectionsas well as moral
onesto seeking retributive justice against former oppressors. He does not consider
the practicability of ubuntu, however, as a goal of social policy. He does not
discuss, for example, what to do with those whose hearts cannot be purged of resentment or
vengeance. Nor does he explain how society can test citizens for purity of mind and
hearthow it can determine who has succeeded and who has failed to assist society
toward this supreme good.
Tutus concept of
reconciliation can be compared to two other versions of social
cooperation: (i) "nonlethal coexistence" and (ii) "democratic
reciprocity." In the first, reconciliation occurs just in case former enemies no
longer kill each other or routinely violate each others basic rights. This
thin sense of reconciliation, attained when cease fires, peace accords, and negotiated
settlements begin to take hold, can be a momentous achievement. Reconciliation as
nonlethal coexistence demands significantly less and is easier to realize than
Tutus much "thicker" ideal that requires friendliness and forgiveness.
Societies rarely, if ever, choose between harmony and mere toleration. Historically,
societies have to choose between toleration among contending groups and the war of each
against all. A more demanding interpretation of reconciliation but one still
significantly less robust than Tutu advocatesis "democratic reciprocity."
In this conception, former enemies or former perpetrators, victims, and bystanders are
reconciled insofar as they respect each other as fellow citizens. Further, all parties
play a role in deliberations concerning the past, present, and future of their country. A
still-divided society will surely find this ideal of democratic reciprocity difficult
enough to attainalthough much easier than an ideal defined by mutual compassion and
the requirement of forgiveness. Some would argue, for instance, that there are
unforgivable crimes or point out that a government should not insist on or even encourage
forgiveness, since forgiveness is a matter for victims to decide.
Not only is Tutus ideal of social harmony
impractical, but it is also problematic because of the way it conceives the relation
between the individual and the group. Tutus formulation of ubuntu either
threatens the autonomy of each member or unrealistically assumes that each and every
individual benefits from the achievements of a larger group. Sometimes individuals do
benefit from social solidarity. But life together is often one in which genuinely good
things, such as communal harmony and individual freedom, my gain and your gain, conflict.
In these cases, fair public deliberation and democratic decision making are the best means
to resolve differences. A process that allows all sides to be heardand encourages
all arguments to be judged on their meritsrespects public well-being, individual
freedom, and a plurality of values.
This analysis of alternative conceptions of
reconciliation not only shows that Tutus ideal is unrealistic but also that it
pays insufficient attention to individual- freedom, including the freedom to withhold
forgiveness. In making social harmony the supreme good, Tutu unfortunately
subordinateswithout argumentother important values, such as truth,
compensation, democracy, and individual accountability. In some contexts, social
harmonyif it respects personal freedom and democratic deliberation should have
priority. In other contexts, society may pursue other equally important values, for
example, justice, which might require a society to indict, try, sentence, and punish
individuals who violated human rights. If social harmony is judged to have priority over
other values, that judgment should emerge not from a cultural, theological, or
philosophical theory but from the deliberation and democratic determination of citizens.
Sources: Desmond M. Tutu, No Future
Without Forgiveness (Doubleday, 1999);
Martha Minow, Between Vengeance and Forgiveness: Facing History after Genocide and Mass
Violence (Beacon Press, 1998); David A. Crocker, "Civil Society and Transitional
Justice," in Civil Society, Democracy, and Civic Renewal, edited by Robert K.
Fullinwider (Rowman & Littlefield, 1999); David A. Crocker, "Reckoning with Past
Wrongs: A Normative Framework," in Ethics & International Affairs, vol. 13
(1999); David A. Crocker, "Truth Commissions, Transitional Justice, and Civil
Society, " in Robert I. Rotberg and Dennis Thompson, eds., Truth v. Justice: The
Morality of Truth Commissions (Princeton University Press, forthcoming); Paul van Zyl,
"Evaluating Justice and Reconciliation Efforts," Perspectives on Ethics &
International Affairs, vol. 1 (1999); Lawrence Crocker, "The Upper Limits of
Punishment," Emory Law Journal, vol. 41 (1992); Geoffrey Cupit, Justice as
Fittingness (Clarendon Press, 1996); Aryeh Neier, War Crimes: Brutality, Genocide,
Terror, and the Struggle for Justice (Times Books, 1998); Robert Nozick,
"Retributive Punishment," in Philosophical Explanations (Belknap Press,
1981); Bill Berkeley, "Aftermath: Genocide, the Pursuit of Justice and the
Future of Africa," Washington Post Magazine ( October 11, 1998); Jean Hampton,
"The Retributive Idea," and Jean Hampton and Jeffrie G. Murphy, "Hatred: A
Qualified Defense," both of which appear in Forgiveness and Mercy, edited by
Jeffrie G. Murphy and Jean Hampton (Cambridge University Press, 1988); Steve Coll,
"Peace Without Justice: A Journey to the Wounded Heart of Africa," Washington
Post Magazine (January 9, 2000); James Bohman, Public Deliberation: Pluralism,
Complexity, and Democracy (MIT Press, 1996); Amy Gutmann and Dennis Thompson, Democracy
and Disagreement (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1996).
David A. Crocker
Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy School of Public Affairs
University of Maryland
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