The inconvenience of the reasonable person standard in criminal law

Autores

  • Juan Pablo Pérez-León Acevedo Åbo Akademi University Department of Law/Institute for Human Rights

    Reseacher, Åbo Akademi University Department of Law/Institute for Human Rights, Åbo, Finland.Lawyer, Pontifical Catholic University of Peru. Master in Laws (LLM), Columbia University. Doctor in Law, Åbo Akademi University. Email: jperez@abo.fi

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18800/derechopucp.201402.015

Palavras-chave:

reasonable, person, standard, American, criminal

Resumo

Following American legal sources, I argue that the use of the reasonable person standard in criminal law is inaccurate and unfair, and, therefore, inconvenient to evaluate human behaviour based on three arguments which address flaws of the standard under analysis. Firstly, this standard is  by definition  abstract, theoretical  and  general, not  reflecting appropriately the person’s sensory and ideational perception of the situation. Secondly, the trend in American legislation and case-law is to apply, in criminal cases, e.g., self-defence, a hybrid criterion, which consists in the consideration of a person’s belief and the correspondence of such a belief to what a reasonable person would believe under the circumstances, as opposed to a purely objective standard. The principle of individual criminal culpability underlies this. Thirdly, the reasonable person standard imposes a sort of majority’s dictatorship by perpetuating a predominant culture disregarding the viewpoints from minority groups.

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Publicado

2014-11-21

Como Citar

Pérez-León Acevedo, J. P. (2014). The inconvenience of the reasonable person standard in criminal law. Derecho PUCP, (73), 505–509. https://doi.org/10.18800/derechopucp.201402.015