Ryan Bergen from Montreal Canada writes: I understand that violent crime has tapered off in absolute terms and this has been credited to changing demographics i.e. there just aren’t as many young people around to commit crimes as there once were relative to the population as a whole. Is this accurate? So then what about the number of crimes committed in relation to the size of the smaller cohort. There may be less violence in Canada than in the past, but are Canadians in fact less violent? Thanks.
Demographic shifts do explain a good deal of the variation in homicide rates, and the rates of other kinds of serious violent crime. In the mid 1970s young men (those between the ages of 18 and 29) represented 10 per cent of the Canadian population; today they represent about 5 per cent of our population. This demographic category is responsible for close to 70 per cent of all violent crime, and so it follows that when their numbers shrink, the crime rate drops. Canadians are no more or less violent today than they were 30 years ago, but the character of the violence has probably changed. We have less domestic violence, for example, but a greater number of homicides involving handguns (and fewer involving rifles or shotguns).
Russ Barth from Ottawa writes: How does the government plan to implement these new sentences on the possession and cultivation of marijuana, when the prohibition laws have been repeatedly ruled unconstitutional?
The “prohibition laws” have, sadly, not been ruled to be unconstitutional. The Supreme Court of Canada, albeit in a split decision, has, relatively recently, upheld the criminal prohibition of marijuana — and Supreme Court decisions bind all courts in the country. Recent provincial court decisions have no binding impact on any other courts.
KS from Toronto writes: Proponents of tougher sentencing usually site the deterrence factor as a major benefit. Is it possible to quantify this? For example, would someone be half as likely to commit a particular crime if the maximum penalty was ten years instead of five? Also, is there a point of diminishing return where increasing sentence length produces no significant increase in deterrence?
There have been many attempts to quantify deterrence. There is no conclusive evidence, for example, that the death penalty deters, or that 10 years imprisonment is more effective than five years imprisonment. There likely is a point of diminishing return — a point that may well begin much more early than the advocates of very long sentences would suggest. Certainty of apprehension is a more important factor in deterrence than length of sentence — and most of those involved in the upper echelons of organized crime have little risk of apprehension.
Ernie Engbrecht from Canada: When I go on the Justice Department website, it appears to me that our present government is heading down a slippery slope in contrast to the studies on their own website. Why does our government insist that deterrence works for a young offender? Where is the data to back up their claims?
The current government’s approach to crime is not evidence-based, but appears to be ideologically driven. Just as communist regimes engaged in ideologically driven “re-education” camps, the Harper government is creating a dubious “science” of human behaviour, for which there is little empirical support. Their approach is modelled to a large extent on a number of failed experiments south of the Border, engineered first by Ronald Reagan and now continued by George Bush — mandatory minimum terms for drug offenders, reverse onus provisions, erosion of parole, and privatization of prisons.
Jonathan Lyster Powell River, BC Canada writes: In other countries such as Britain, attempts at alternative methods of dealing with drugs, users, and dealers have been made, such as giving addicts free methadone or even heroin. What are the results and consequences of these programs, and would they work here in Canada?
Prescription heroin has, for a relatively small group of addicted heroin addicts, been a highly successful program, in Germany, Switzerland, and the Netherlands; both the health and social functioning of users has improved markedly when they have had access to a relatively inexpensive source of heroin; there is a substantial range of academic literature documenting the success of these programs, published in the most prestigious of medical journals. The NAOMI trials, currently underway in Vancouver and Montreal, will likely demonstrate viability within a Canadian context. Methadone has also been a useful form of maintenance for some users. For all intravenous users, however, the best outcome remains abstinence.
Robert Hamilton from Toronto writes: Practically speaking is law enforcement really ‘going after’ addicted users? If not then why does anybody have a problem with stiffer sentences for drug dealers?
The reality is that the folks who appear in criminal courts charged with trafficking offences are overwhelmingly not major drug dealers. They are typically user-dealers, or small scale dealers. Only a tiny fraction of those who are charged are getting rich from dealing illegal drugs. Law enforcement officers would very much like to be securing convictions for major drug dealers, but this just doesn’t happen very often.
Albin Forone from Toronto writes: I remember Prof Boyd from some time at Simon Fraser, and am glad when his views get public air time. Generally I agree with him on how many ‘crimes’ could be harmlessly and cheaply decriminalized or licensed. Even so, it seems to me that however much you ‘take off the table’ as criminal behaviour, there remains a ‘criminal element’ that will seek out and try to profit from the real crimes that must reasonably be kept on the books. For example, Canada will continuously need and want immigration, but some component of every immigrant wave in this country has formed gang organizations and moved into whatever can be done illegally for profit. So for me, indeed let’s prune the Criminal Code, but let’s also put the hammer down very hard on those who continue to violate it. Any comment appreciated.
I think it is both fair and accurate to say that a criminal element would remain, even if the illicit drug trade was to be regulated in a non-criminal context. Terrorists, for example, would continue to find commercial opportunities for fraud and theft in many other contexts. But I don’t think we should be blaming new immigrants for creating crime waves. While it is true that “some component” of many of our waves of new immigrants becomes involved in crime, the native born crime rate remains higher than the crime rate of immigrant populations.
Alan Doyle from Canada writes: Do you think that Canada will ever separate marijuana from other drugs in terms of illegality? I am tired of seeing pot lumped in with meth, as if they were similar. It seems like equating an illegal right turn with vehicular homicide, and nobody seems to make a coherent argument for why this is the case. Is it just puritan thinking or is there a legit reason for this? Thanks.
One could argue that the Controlled Drugs and Substance Act of 1997 has separated marijuana from other drugs, albeit not in terms of illegality. You are right to say that marijuana is an entirely different drug — and social problem — than crystal meth. And our courts do view the two drugs quite differently. Marijuana is also a good deal less dangerous than alcohol and tobacco, even when rates of use are taken into account. It is ironic that those who literally push tobacco in third world countries are seen as contributing corporate citizens, and those who sell marijuana to willing consumers are seen as entirely different, and deserving of our moral condemnation.
Bert Russell of Paradox B.C. writes: If young impressionable youth can see direct consequences for law breaking they will generally not break it. Right now, some have no respect for the law or themselves - they are being raised in a society of parents who are too busy, permissive or have lacked a good role model themselves to know the benefits. There are people who will try to break the law and get away with it and who are willing to accept a slap on the wrist as a license to keep on breaking the law. I believe the vast majority of Canadians will accept law and order (maybe grudgingly sometimes) but will obey because they learn to value respect and weigh consequence. Any thoughts, Professor Boyd?
Laws should deserve respect, but in Canada we have, historically, endorsed the criminalization of homosexuals, corporal punishment in schools, the confiscation of the land of Japanese Canadians, and the de facto imprisonment of aboriginal Canadians in residential schools. Laws that criminally prohibit cannabis and simultaneously support the use of alcohol and tobacco cannot easily win the respect of young people — this has been our reality in both Canada and the United States for the past 30 years.
Robert Hill from Ottawa Canada writes: Dear Professor, I am currently taking a course on criminal behaviour and one message that our professor is emphasizing is that tougher sentences do not reduce crime and in some studies has been shown to make it worse. My question then is if research shows that incarceration and deterrence are ineffective tools at reducing crime then why is the general public seemingly oblivious to this message? And why is it the only comments we hear from politicians concern getting tough?
I can only say that human beings are not nearly as intelligent or as insightful as is often claimed. We all go through life with cultural blinders, and this is another example of the phenomenon. It is also apparent that the messages that you receive in institutions of higher learning are often messages that are resisted by those with the power to act on them.
Rob Johnston from Guelph writes: Why has such a failure of an idea been so successful at staying alive? When Bentham found a high occurrence of pick-pocketing at public executions, shouldn’t that have been enough? When study after study shows stiff sentencing doesn’t deter, how many centuries of proof do we need? That idea has been shot down, can’t people just move on admit that they just think that people should be severely punished for breaking the law? Why the need to justify it any further?
You make a good point. Punishment has very little to do with deterrence; it has much to do with community denunciation of conduct that we consider intolerable.
Mungo Shuley from Lower Mainland writes: I would like to ask professor Boyd if our current government’s and previous government’s reluctance to abandon the failed US style war on drugs is due strictly to US pressure or are there other factors in play?
The current government essentially endorses the U.S. war on drugs, albeit in a slightly less punitive format. The Liberals, the NDP and the Bloc have all, historically, offered quite different alternatives to the Harper government’s approach to crime. In more than 40 years of observation of federal governments and their articulation of criminal justice policy, I have never seen a government that is more averse to available evidence, and more committed to a rigid, ideologically-driven agenda than the current one. Their policies are, however, very much in line with the vision of George W. Bush and his government.
Anne-Marie McElroy from Ottawa writes: It seems that the general public is not aware of the principles underlying sentencing of crimes, such as the discretion that a judge has to decide the appropriate sentence for the particular individual for that specific crime. Given that the Supreme Court seems to have deferred these sorts of sentences to the legislature, it seems that the issue is in the hands of a parliament looking for political gain through questionable policy, with an ill-informed public. How do you think lack of awareness should be addressed?
I wish I knew. I do know, however, that there is much less media dissemination of criticism of criminal justice policy than there should be. In part, this is because the status quo tends to be protected by those who can control the media. It is an axiom of bureaucratic and corporate life, I suppose.
R.C. from Toronto writes: I get the sense that if youth are incarcerated early they learn from more seasoned criminals and are likely to re-offend, but I don’t want to see them go unpunished. So what’s the answer and how have ‘rehabilitation techniques’ in prison/jail changed, if at all?
There are many promising developments here — restorative justice is probably the best known and the most hopeful.
David Andrews from Canada writes: The recently introduced legislation which aims to get tough on ’serious’ drug offences seems a bit watered down in terms of what we could expect from the Harper Conservative government. Should we expect to see Mr. Harper get even tougher on drug crime in the event that his party wins a majority? More specifically, should we expect marijuana trafficking that is not connected to organized crime to be targeted for harsher penalties by this government?
The penalties that the government has introduced already represent a marked departure from existing norms. Provincial jail populations will increase by almost 30 per cent, just to house marijuana growers and distributors. The question of whether marijuana trafficking is connected to organized crime will help fill the pockets of defence lawyers. By definition, any sale of marijuana to another person is an organized criminal activity. The Harper government’s proposed legislation will increase profits for marijuana growers and dealers, and defence counsel. The losers will be the taxpayers of Canada, who will be faced with the billion dollar tax bill required to build the new prisons to house these offenders.
Reprinted from The Globe and Mail Online, November 23, 2007