Poverty Penalties as Human Rights Problems
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-27-2023
Abstract
Fines and other financial sanctions are frequently imposed by criminal justice systems around the world. Yet they also raise grave concerns about economic discrimination. Unless they are perfectly scaled to defendants’ financial circumstances, they will penalize poor persons far more than rich ones—and poor defendants’ inability to pay can lead to further penalties like imprisonment or additional financial sanctions. These “poverty penalties” have received attention in domestic jurisdictions but are understudied as a global phenomenon. This Article takes up this issue and makes three contributions. First, it demonstrates that poverty penalties are prevalent in criminal justice systems around the world. Second, it shows how poverty penalties came to be overlooked in international human rights law and describes how this is starting to change. Third, the Article makes the normative case for addressing poverty penalties within human rights law and offers suggestions for how this can be achieved.
Publication Title
American Journal of International Law
Repository Citation
Galbraith, Jean; AlMarri, Latifa; Bhati, Lisha; Brooks, Rheem; Green, Zachary; Hu, Margo; and Irshaidat, Noor, "Poverty Penalties as Human Rights Problems" (2023). Articles. 156.
https://scholarship.law.upenn.edu/faculty_articles/156
https://doi.org/10.1017/ajil.2023.25
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/ajil.2023.25