Abstract

Sex offenders are sometimes offered or required to undergo pharmacological interventions intended to diminish their sex drive (anti-libidinal interventions or ALIs). In this paper, we argue that much of the debate regarding the moral permissibility of ALIs has been founded on an inaccurate assumption regarding their intended purpose—namely, that ALIs are intended solely to realise medical purposes, not correctional goals. This assumption has made it plausible to assert that ALIs may only permissibly be administered to offenders with their valid consent, in line with the approach taken to most other interventions with a medical aim. However, we argue that, contrary to this assumption, the state's intention in relation to at least some ALIs is, at least in part, to achieve correctional objectives. We evaluate two legal regimes for ALI provision—section 645 of the California Penal Code and the mental health regime in England and Wales. In each case, we identify the state's implicit purpose in imposing ALIs and argue that the Californian and English regimes both serve as counterexamples to the view that ALIs are intended solely for medical purposes. While the moral implications of our argument are not straightforward, it raises the question whether consent is required for permissible imposition of ALIs, and more generally, whether the moral permissibility of crime-preventing interventions using medical means should be assessed against the standards of medical ethics or against those of criminal justice ethics.

Highlights

  • Less well known is that some widely used anti-depressants, which can lower libido as a side effect when used to treat depression, have been used in sex offenders for these anti-libidinal effects.[2]

  • This assumption has made it plausible to assert that ALIs may only permissibly be administered to offenders with their valid consent, in line with the approach taken to most other interventions with a medical aim

  • While the moral implications of our argument are not straightforward, it raises the question whether consent is required for permissible imposition of ALIs, and more generally, whether the moral permissibility of crime-preventing interventions using medical means should be assessed against the standards of medical ethics or against those of criminal justice ethics

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Summary

THE ASSUMPTION

Debate concerning the use of ALIs in sex offenders has focussed on their use as an optional alternative to (further) incarceration. Criminal offenders.[16] (It is perhaps for this reason that they have not entertained the possibility that it might be permissible to impose ALIs on sex offenders without offering any alternative.) This common acceptance of the consent requirement betrays, we believe, an assumption that ALIs are intended to realise medical rather than correctional objectives. 18 An alternative explanation would be that those who have accepted the consent requirement have assumed that ALIs ought to be imposed only for medical purposes, though they are not currently (we return to this view below). We present these two jurisdictions as counterexamples to the view that ALIs are intended solely for medical purposes, and we have chosen these jurisdictions because they exemplify two rather different ways in which ALIs may be used for correctional purposes. The argument is not, that the consent requirement is certainly inappropriate, only that, where ALIs are intended for correctional purposes, the consent requirement cannot be assumed without argument (as it has been)

MEDICAL AND CORRECTIONAL OBJECTIVES
EN GLANDAND WA LE S
CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS
97 MHA 2007
Full Text
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