Nordic Exceptionalism Revisited: Explaining the Paradox of a Janus-Faced Penal Regime
Theoretical Criminology 17 (1): 3-23 (2013)
Criminal Justice, Borders and Citizenship Research Paper No. 2554457
22 Pages Posted: 24 Jan 2015
Date Written: 2013
Abstract
Nordic penal regimes are Janus-faced: one side relatively mild and benign; the other intrusive, disciplining and oppressive. This paradox has not been fully grasped or explained by the Nordic Exceptionalism thesis which overstates the degree to which Nordic penal order is based on humaneness and social solidarity, an antidote to mass incarceration. This essay examines the split in the foundation of the Swedish welfare state: it simultaneously promotes individual well-being in the social sphere but enables intrusive deprivations of liberty and in some cases, violates the principles of human rights. The backbone of the welfare state, Folkhemmet, the People’s Home, is at once demos, democratic and egalitarian and ethnos, a people by blood, exclusionary and essentialist. The lack of individual rights and an ethno-cultural conception of citizenship make certain categories of people such as criminal offenders, criminal aliens, drug offenders and perceived ‘others’, particularly foreign nationals, vulnerable to deprivation and exclusion.
Keywords: Ethnicity, public criminology, punishment and society, social exclusion, welfare state
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