The statement that the government shall not inflict 'cruel and unusual punishment' for crimes is found in the
English Bill of Rights signed in
1689 by King
William III and Queen
Mary II who were then the joint rulers of
England following the '
Glorious Revolution' of
1688.
These exact words later appeared in the
Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution (
1787). The British
Slavery Amelioration Act of
1798 also used the term, forbidding slave owners from using "Cruel and unusual punishment" on slaves in the British Caribbean colonies.
Very similar words ('No one shall be subjected to
torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment') appear in Article Five of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights adopted by the
United Nations General Assembly (A/RES/217,
December 10,
1948). The right, under a different formulation ('No one shall be subjected to [...] inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.') is found in Article Three of the
European Convention on Human Rights (
1950). The
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (
1982) also contains this fundamental right in
section 12 and it is to be found again in Article Four (quoting the European Convention verbatim) of the
Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (
2000).
Definition
What these words mean in practice is the subject of much legal argument.
In general the interpretation of each of the two words is in keeping with the basic legal maxim that the "punishment should fit the crime".
The term "cruel" is necessarily flexible according to the circumstances, since all punishments are inherently cruel to some greater or lesser degree. The "unusual" provision has proven easier to interpret: providing that persons will not be subjected to arbitrary, humorous, or capricious punishment outside the normal course of the law (for example,
tarring and feathering). Another way to make the punishment usual is to simply use it more often.
Though it's been a part of the law in the
United States of America since its inception, by the
twentieth century many people in the U.S. came to consider capital punishment ''per se'' to be a cruel and unusual punishment. As of 2006, twelve U.S. states have legislatively abolished the
death penalty, and others have specifically prohibited certain methods of
execution, e.g. by
electrocution, by
hanging, etc. The
Supreme Court has ruled that the application of the death penalty, in certain circumstances — such as the execution of a
minor under the age of 18, or of a
mentally handicapped person, is unconstitutional, regardless of the existence of other aggravating circumstances. ''See also:
Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution''. The Court also ruled in 1983 that the imposition of a sentence of
life imprisonment without parole for a non-violent felony ''may'' constitute cruel and unusual punishment, although a subsequent decision represented a partial retreat from that position.
At the time the Eighth Amendment was written, capital punishment was in common use, in America, in Great Britain, and in Western Europe. There also existed punishments that were generally considered cruel and unusual, such as
hanging, drawing, and quartering;
burning at the stake; and
impalement. These were so cruel that they were rarely inflicted, which was their point: if a punishment was common, it would lose its terrible aspect, but if it was only inflicted a few times a century, on the worst of criminals, their moans and screams would give second thoughts to anyone who might consider repeating their crimes.
In the
European Union, on the other hand, prohibition of the death penalty has been made a fundamental condition which must either be passed into the law of states hoping to join, or, as in the case of
Latvia, its use be subject to a
moratorium. The
Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (which currently carries no legal standing) states in its second article that "Everyone has the right to life. No one shall be condemned to the death penalty, or executed."
Related concepts
A related right is
security of person, which is an expanded right against less lethal conduct.
[1]
References
1. Rhona K.M. Smith, ''Textbook on International Human Rights'', second edition, Oxford University Press, 2005, p. 245.
External links
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Cases in 2003
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Cases in 2002
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Cases in 2001
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Cases in 2000
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American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man (Approved by the Ninth International Conference of American States, Bogotá, Colombia, 1948)