Spanking and "Correction"
I am somewhat alarmed to learn from Paul that Canadian law protects the right of parents and teachers (?!) to use reasonable force against children for "correction." I would certainly acknowledge concerns about selective enforcement, though such concerns are hardly unique to spanking regulations (and perhaps are better aimed at laws that are affirmatively harmful, such as drug laws). However, I find unpersuasive the notion that anyone has a "right" to use physical force (however "reasonable") to "correct" a child. There is no evidence that hitting a toddler has any beneficial effects for the toddler, and older children appear to gain nothing from the practice either. Spanking (or, to use a less pc term, "hitting") children seems, therefore, to serve the parent's interests in retribution or in releasing pent-up anger rather than the child's interest in learning to behave properly. The law's choice of the word "correction," moreover, in referring to the use of force to subordinate one's "inferiors" in the household is unlikely to be an accident. Both husbands (who had proprietary rights over their wives) and parents (who had similar sorts of rights over their children) could historically use violence to keep their subordinates in line, and this function was called "correction" as well (specifically, a right of "moderate correction," if I remember correctly). I think it is a property conception of parenthood that makes anyone think it is acceptable to hit our children (even when we leave no marks) to teach them right from wrong. And any teacher who hits a child (with a hand or a ruler) to discipline him or her (rather than, for example, in self-defense) should be suspended and perhaps terminated from the job of school-teacher. I believe that we have evolved morally from the place where we exercised the prerogative to use violence in the privacy of our own home. Though spanking may be a less injurious form of assault than beating with a ruler or a belt, it is still violence and should not be encouraged. I fear that when a court awards protection for the "right" to use "reasonable" force, it (perhaps inadvertently) lends undeserved credence to the notion that the "head of household" is entitled to assert ownership over his human subjects. Incidentally, worries about selective enforcement and the disruption of households underlay the inexcusable exemption of marital sexual assault from the criminal law of rape in both the Model Penal Code and in most state codes until quite recently. Though a history of misuse is not a dispositive argument against the right to spank, it should give us pause, at the very least.
5 Comments:
At 12:06 AM,
cford said…
To be clear: the Supreme Court of Canada found that the relevant provision in the Criminal Code was not unconstitutional - i.e., it did not infringe children's right to security of the person under s. 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. This is not quite the same thing as *protecting* adults' rights to corporally punish children. The Code provision in question says, "Every schoolteacher, parent or person standing in the place of a parent is justified in using force by way of correction toward a pupil or child, as the case may be, who is under his care, if the force does not exceed what is reasonable under the circumstances."
The Court spent some time talking about the narrow limits of force that was "reasonable under the circumstances." Paul's link wasn't working for me, but the 2003 judgment is available at http://www.canlii.org/ca/
cas/scc/2004/2004scc4.html.
At 1:40 PM,
Michael Yuri said…
This post has been removed by a blog administrator.
At 3:06 PM,
Derek said…
I recently heard a different argument for rejecting the California proposal. Commentators on an NPR show (I can't remember which one) argued that it was culturally insensitive since, by and large, it's African American families who would be affected. The worry wasn't selective enforcement, but was rather based on the endorsement of the stereotype that black parents are more likely to spank their children than white parents.
Putting the truth or falsity of this stereotype aside, it wasn't clear to me whether the argument was that spanking was part of black culture and therefore shouldn't be intruded upon, or that there is legitimate disagreement between different cultural groups about the effectiveness of spanking and the proposed ban merely favors the view of the group in power.
At 8:03 PM,
Sherry F. Colb said…
I deleted a line in the original blog entry which misattributed the origin of the term "rule of thumb" after a reader noticed the error.
At 2:06 AM,
PG said…
Technically, one can distinguish between "spanking" and "hitting." Spanking traditionally involves a certain amount of ceremony and is applied to the posterior; the offender bends over and presents his rear to the person disciplining him. This helps to distinguish the what is done by the authority from what the offender himself does. (You hit your sister, for which your mother spanks you.) Hitting is a much larger category of behavior, that covers everything from slapping to punching. If one of my friends says he got spanked as a kid, I assume his parents simply were old-fashioned about child-rearing; if he says he got *hit*, I wonder if they were seriously abusive.
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