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Frances Delinquency Bill: A step towards totalitarianism
By Antoine Lerougetel
26 September 2006
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The draft Prevention of Delinquency Law, presented to the French
Senate on September 13, gives greatly increased powers to local
officials to pry into the private lives of families and to punish
and control them. It is particularly directed at children and
parents in deprived areas.
In gestation for over three years, under the direction of Minister
of the Interior Nicolas Sarkozy, it is the latest in a line of
authoritarian legislative measures which the Gaullist government
of President Jacques Chirac has put on the statute books since
2002.
The draft law adds to the repressive measures against children
and families contained in the Equality of Opportunity Law, which
was passed in the teeth of the mass opposition of students and
workers last spring. It is a direct response to the unrest expressed
in the riots of immigrant and working class youth in the deprived
city suburbs (banlieues) in the autumn of 2005.
The preamble to the bill is littered with phrases like making
every citizen responsible and harsher sanctions.
Chapter VII states that Punishment, for minors as for adults,
has a highly educative and dissuasive function.
Mayors of communes, already empowered to order the police to
investigate any citizen they suspect of a misdemeanor and to act
independently of their locally elected bodies, will have their
duties and obligations of surveillance and control vastly increased;
... in line with the general police powers that he exercises
in his commune, the mayor activates and coordinates
the prevention of delinquency programme.
The mayor will chair a Council for the Rights and Duties
of Families, which must be set up in all towns of over 10,000
inhabitants. He will be empowered to give official admonitions
(rappels à lordre) for any disorderliness,
and impose parental supervision (accompagement
parental) on parents he considers failing in their
duties. This could involve compulsory parenting classes at their
own expense and the placement of children in special institutions.
He will be able to request that the juvenile court (le juge
des enfants) designate an official to administer the welfare
payments of families.
The mayor will be able to commit to hospital for 72 hours,
by decree and without a medical opinion, a person under his jurisdiction
whose mental derangement needs attention and who endangers
people or who seriously disturbs public order. This power
is at present restricted to 24 hours and is subject to immediate
confirmation by a psychiatric hospital and the préfet.
Those working with families will be obliged to reveal information
on difficult cases usually protected by professional secrecy regulations
to this elected and often highly partisan official, who needs
to prove no expertise in these matters.
Teachers and educational administrators will be required to
provide the mayor with lists of children who miss classes and
are in difficulty at school, and the welfare services must provide
useful information about named people.
In earlier versions, the draft bill stipulated that children
exhibiting rebellious or antisocial behaviour from the age of
three should be singled out to the authorities and maintained
under surveillance as potential criminals.
Educational, social and hospital workers have responded by
forming the National Collective of Organisations in Resistance
against Informing (délation). The word délation
has a special resonance in France in relation to experiences during
the Nazi occupation and the Vichy collaborationist regime, when
widespread informing against opponents and designated victims
was encouraged by the authorities.
As the collectives July 11 document points out, Today,
according to the bill, the authorities may be notified of any
person as soon as that person experiences financial, educational,
psychological difficulties... It gives the mayor personal powers
to intervene in virtually all the situations which may come up
in his commune... His decisions are unilateral and the citizens
have no legal means of challenging them... It lays the basis for
generalised suspicion and surveillance.
Laurent Puech, the president of the ANAS (National Association
of Social Service Workers), told LHumanité, It
stigmatises people in difficulty, turning them into nests of potential
delinquents, and organises around the families, held to be the
only people responsible for delinquency, a real social control.
Puech added: Imagine that a couple goes to a drug addiction
centre. The social worker informs the mayor. When it comes to
allocating council houses, do you think that a couple thus stigmatized
will be given priority?
The scope for blackmail, favouritism and corruption, already
rife, will only be increased.
The Immigration Law passed in June already gave vast new powers
to mayors to judge whether immigrants, wishing to be reunited
with family members or extend their residence permit, fit into
extremely subjective and arbitrary criteria, such as integration
into French society and personal commitment to respect
the principles which regulate the French Republic.
An important dimension of the draft law is its reduction in
the safeguards for children who get into trouble with the police.
These are enshrined in order 45-174 of February 1945, designed
to make judgements for child offenders educational rather than
punitive.
The bills preamble asserts that today there is a tendency
to greater juvenile criminality, without attempting to give any
account of the causes of this phenomenon (which according to the
Magistrates Union is very much exaggerated): More and more,
some minors fall into delinquency before age 13 and get deeply
into it for lack of a suitable response.
While lamenting the fact that minors under 13 cannot
be given a prison sentence, nor be placed in provisional detention,
the preamble asserts that it is necessary to broaden the
range of measures applicable to children under 13 and proposes
their placement in special schools or boarding establishments.
Other measures for juveniles include forced community work.
The scientific justification for the Prevention
of Delinquency Bill is the 2005 National Institute of Health and
Medical Research (INSERM) report, Behavioural Disorders
in Children and Adolescents.
Commissioned at the instigation of the health
insurance organisation for independent professionals and business
people, CANAM, it was drawn up by a panel of carefully selected
experts with a heavy bias to genetic determinist rather than environmental
factors in the conditioning of human behaviour.
The INSERM report provoked a widespread reaction amongst mental
health workers in France, who organised behind the petition, No
Nought for Behaviour for Three-Year-Olds. This is a reference
to the old practice in the schools, now being reintroduced, of
giving a mark out of 20 for good conduct. The protesting professionals
announced at a press conference last March that they had collected
120,000 signatures, and they distributed a detailed critique of
the report.
The critique pointed out that on the panel there figured neither
experts in the social sciences nor the sciences of education,
public health, law or ethics. There were no front line practitioners:
paediatricians, child psychiatrists or clinical psychologists.
None of the main associations of child psychiatry had been consulted.
The experts chosen wanted to impose as a model certain
Anglo-Saxon, essentially US practices... [which] rely essentially
on the use of psychotropic drugs associated with a very normative
vision of psychotherapeutic practices. This medicated approach
ignores the contribution of a humanistic and psychodynamic approach
which considers the child in its environment as a
whole.
The INSERM report puts the rate of genetic inheritance
involved in an individuals behaviour at around 50 percent.
The opposing petitioners point out: The presentation of
this body of research, with a [genetic] determinist vision which
leads to proposals for a predictive medical practice, brings back
the dangerous 19th century theses where people spoke of born
criminals and the dangerous classes.
The most disturbing points of the report identified by its
opponents read, It is recommended, at the age of 36 months,
to note on the childs medical record whether it feels remorse,
if it does not modify its behaviour, if it is guilty
of biting or incriminated for fighting;
at four, whether it continues to lie; later, whether the child
presents a low index of affective morality...
Considered as possible risk factors that may herald later delinquent
behaviour are an attraction for novelty, the taste for exploration
... a diminished feeling of fear.
Petitioners point out that opposition to authority, disobedience
and kicking against social norms are not signs of sicknes;: most
often they are psychological shifts which accompany stages in
the normal development of children. Indeed, for subdued
children affected by difficult conditions of life, the health
professionals are on the look out for the first signs of
opposition and anger as evidence that they are on the mend.
The preamble to the Prevention of Delinquency Bill blames delinquent
behaviour on what it calls the confusion of prevention and
social policy, i.e., on any attempt to examine the social
cause of bad behaviour rather than the resort to punishments.
Speaking of the INSERM report, Sarkozy told the National Assembly
on February 28, As all the scientists and all the doctors
say, the sooner we intervene, the better chance we have of avoiding
the tragedy of a child developing towards delinquency.
See Also:
France: Likely Socialist Party
presidential candidate wants unruly youth drafted into the military
[10 June 2006]
France: Anti-terrorism
legislation tramples on civil liberties
[5 December 2005]
French Socialist Party
congress backs government repression
[28 November 2005]
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