Текст
                    Серия
«КЛАССИЧЕСКИЙ
УНИВЕРСИТЕТСКИЙ УЧЕБНИК»
основана в 2002 году по инициативе ректора
МГУ им. М. В. Ломоносова
академика РАН В. А. Садовничего
и посвяшена
250-летию
Московского университета

КЛАССИЧЕСКИЙ УНИВЕРСИТЕТСКИЙ УЧЕБНИК Редакционный совет серии Председатель совета ректор Московского университета В. А. Садовничий Члены совета: Виханский О. С., Голиченков А. К., Гусев М. В., Добренькое В. И., Доннов А. И., Засурский Я. Н., Зинченко Ю. П. (ответственный секретарь), Камзолов А. И. (ответственный секретарь), Карпов С. П., Касимов Н. С., Колесов В. П., Лободанов А. П., Лунин В. В., Лупанов О. Б., Мейер М. С., Миронов В. В. (заместитель председателя Михалев А. В., Моисеев Е. И., Пушаровский Д. Ю., Раевская О. В., Ремнева М. Л., Розов Н. X., Салеикий А. М. (заместитель председателя), Сурин А. В., Тер-Минасова С. Г., Ткачук В. А., Третьяков Ю. Д., Трухин В. И., Трофимов В. Т. (заместитель председателя), Шоба С. А
МОСКОВСКИЙ ГОСУДАРСТВЕННЫЙ УНИВЕРСИТЕТ имени М. В. Ломоносова Факультет иностранных языков Кафедра английского языка для гуманитарных факультетов Ю.Л. Туманова, В.А. Королева-МакАри, М.Л. Свешникова, Е.В. Тихомирова THE BEST OF JUST ENGLISH JUST ENGLISH. АНГЛИЙСКИЙ ДЛЯ ЮРИСТОВ. БАЗОВЫЙ КУРС JUST ENGLISH. 101 TEXTS ON LAW. ДЛЯ БУДУЩИХ ЮРИСТОВ JUST ENGLISH. CLONES ARE COMING. THEORIES, FACTS AND OPINIONS FOR DISCUSSION Учебное пособие для юридических ВУЗов под ред. Т.Н. Шишкиной Издательство «Зерцало» Издательство Московского университета 2004
УДК 811.111 ББК 81.2 Англ-923 Печатается по решению Ученого совета Московского университета Рекомендовано Советом по правоведению и Советом по иностранным языкам УМО университетов России в качестве учебного пособия для высших юридических учебных заведений Рецензенты: доктор филологических наук, профессор С.Г. Тер-Минасова доктор юридических наук, профессор Н.А. Крашенинникова доктор филологических наук, профессор О.В. Александрова Художники А.Л. Егоров, Б.М. Левина, Е.А. Павлович Корректор М.К. Туманова Компьютерная верстка А.В.Плотников The Best of Just English. Английский для Юристов. 4.1: Just English. Английский для юристов. Базовый курс. Туманова Ю.Л., Королева- МакАри В.А., Свешникова М.Л., Тихомирова Е.В. 4.2: Just English. 101 Texts on Law. Для будущих юристов. Туманова Ю.Л., Королева- МакАри В.А., Свешникова М.Л., Тихомирова Е.В. Ч.З: Just English. Clones are Coming. Theories, Facts and Opinions for Discussion. Туманова Ю.Л., Королева-МакАри B.A. / Под ред. Т.Н. Шишкиной. — М.: ЗЕРЦАЛО, 2004. — 512 с. (Классический университетский учебник) ISBN 5-8078-0096-6 В данном издании под одной обложкой собраны наиболее популярные учебные пособия серии Just English, широко используемые на юридических факультетах и в ВУЗах России и СНГ. Пособие рассчитано на широкую аудиторию специалистов, изучающих английский язык в связи с правовой специальностью. Материалы сборника позволяют овладеть правовой лексикой, на инте- ресном и аутентичном материале изучить основные понятия юриспруденции, узнать об истории и функционировании государственных, политических и судебных структур Великобритании и США, а также развить столь необходи- мые для юриста-профессионала навыки анализа текста и ведения дискуссии. Издание подготовлено профессорско-преподавательским составом факуль- тета иностранных языков МГУ им. М.В. Ломоносова на основе учебной про- граммы курса английского языка для юридических ВУЗов. УДК 811.111 ББК 81.2 Англ-923 © Коллектив авторов, 2003 © Издательство “Зерцало”, 2003 © МГУ им. М. В. Ломоносова, ISBN 5-8078-0096-6 художественное оформление, 2003
Предисловие Уважаемый читатель! Вы открыли одну из замечательных книг, изданных в серии «Классический университетский учебник», посвяшенной 250-летию Московского университета. Серия включает свыше 150 учебников и учебных пособий, рекомендованных к изданию Учеными советами факультетов, редакционным советом серии и издаваемых к юбилею по решению Ученого совета МГУ. Московский университет всегда славился своими профессорами и преподавателями, воспитавшими не одно поколение студентов, впоследствии внесших заметный вклад в развитие нашей страны, составивших гордость отечественной и мировой науки, культуры и образования. Высокий уровень образования, которое дает Московский уни- верситет, в первую очередь обеспечивается высоким уровнем напи- санных выдающимися учеными и педагогами учебников и учебных пособий, в которых сочетаются как глубина, так и доступность излагаемого материала. В этих книгах аккумулируется бесценный опыт методики и методологии преподавания, который становится достоянием не только Московского университета, но и других уни- верситетов России и всего мира. Издание серии «Классический университетский учебник» нагляд- но демонстрирует тот вклад, который вносит Московский универси- тет в классическое университетское образование в нашей стране и, несомненно, служит его развитию. Решение этой благородной задачи было бы невозможным без активной помоши со стороны издательств, принявших участие в издании книг серии «Классический университетский учебник». Мы расцениваем это как поддержку ими позиции, которую занимает Московский университет в вопросах науки и образования. Это слу- жит также свидетельством того, что 250-летний юбилей Московско- го университета — выдающееся событие в жизни всей нашей стра- ны, мирового образовательного сообщества. Р\ Ректор Московского университета ' J- академик РАН, профессор В. А. Садовничий
ОБ АВТОРАХ Авторы учебного пособия “The Best of Just English. Английский для юристов” на протяжении многих лет занимаются преподавательской дея- тельностью на юридическом факультете Московского Университета им. М.В.Ломоносова. Опубликовали ряд учебных пособий по английскому язы- ку для юридической специальности. Приняли участие в международном проекте с университетом г. Ковентри (Великобритания) по созданию курса английского языка для гуманитарных ВУЗов. В 2000 году удостоены пре- мии им. И.И.Шувалова за серию учебных пособий Just English. Организато- ры Всероссийского научно-практического семинара “Английский язык для юристов. Оригинальные учебники и методики”. Как медиаторы интернацио- нальных связей создали международный гуманитарный проект “Just English. War on Terror ”. Шишкина Татьяна Николаевна — Доцент факультета иностранных языков, кандидат филологических наук. Руководит кафедрой английско- го языка для гуманитарных факультетов МГУ им. М.В.Ломоносова, самой большой языковой кафедрой в Московском Университете. Татьяна Никола- евна — неоднократный участник международных проектов в области пре- подавания иностранных языков. Автор многочисленных учебных пособий и научных работ. Ответственный редактор серии Just English. Туманова Юлия Леонидовна — Доцент факультета иностранных языков МГУ, кандидат социологических наук. Работает на кафедре англий- ского языка для гуманитарных факультетов МГУ с 1989 г. Юлия Леонидов- на ведет занятия на юридическом факультете, а также занимается научно- исследовательской работой по теории и практике межкультурных коммуни- каций. В центре исследовательской деятельности — социолингвистические аспекты политической корректности в России, Великобритания и США. Юлия Леонидовна—автор сайта www.just-english.ru, координирует его web- дизайн и осуществляет информационную поддержку. Является руководите- лем творческого коллектива Just English. Королева-МакАри Владилена Анатольевна — Магистр диплома- тии и права юридического факультета университета г. Ковентри. Препода- вала английский язык на переводческом факультете Московского Институ- та Иностранных языков им. Мориса Тореза и на юридическом факультете МГУ. В настоящее время Владилена Анатольевна преподает русский язык в
Об авторах VII Великобритании специалистам ведущих фирм Лондонского Сити в области экономики и права. Ведет занятия на факультете гуманитарных наук (ка- федра иностранных языков) Кингстонского Университета. Занимается раз- работкой методологии преподавания русского языка как иностранного в ан- глоязычной среде. Свешникова Мария Леонидовна — Старший преподаватель кафед- ры английского языка для гуманитарных факультетов МГУ им. М.В.Ломо- носова. Ведет научно-методическую и преподавательскую работу на юри- дическом факультете МГУ. Координатор международных он-лайновых кон- ференций студентов-юристов (Россия — США). Член комиссии по связям с регионами факультета иностранных языков МГУ. Участник программы “Открытый Мир. Верховенство закона” Американских Советов по между- народному образованию, организованной Библиотекой Конгресса США. Тихомирова Елизавета Владимировна — Старший преподаватель кафедры английского языка для гуманитарных факультетов МГУ им. М.В.Ло- моносова. Руководит методической работой по английскому языку на юри- дическом факультете. Автор учебного плана и программы по английскому языку для юридического факультета МГУ. Ведет занятия по технике пере- вода текстов по юриспруденции. Организует семинары и мастер-классы для специалистов юридического профиля в области преподавания английского языка.
ОТЗЫВЫ О СЕРИИ JUST ENGLISH Доктор юридических наук, профессор МГУ им. М.В. Ломоносова Евгений Алексеевич Суханов: Настоящие учебные пособия охватывают основные этапы образования студентов-юристов: первое пособие является базовым курсом юридическо- го английского; второе содержит обширный материал о правовых системах Великобритании и США; третье предназначено для углубленного изучения английского языка студентами, ориентированными на юридическую специ- ализацию. Учебные пособия написаны в соответствии с традициями Московско- го Университета и привязаны к учебному плану юридического факультета. Написание учебников потребовало от авторов большого, многолетнего тру- да, высокой профессиональной квалификации как в области преподавания иностранных языков, так и в сфере юриспруденции. Учебные пособия получили многостороннюю апробацию на юриди- ческом факультете МГУ. Студенты с интересом занимаются по данным по- собиям, успешно овладевая необходимыми знаниями, формируя и развивая основные навыки. Учебники серии приняты в качестве основных на юриди- ческом факультете МГУ им. М.В. Ломоносова, в Высшей школе экономики (Москва), во Всероссийском институте государства и права (Москва), в фи- лиале Тюменского государственного университета (Нижневартовск), а так- же во многих других высших учебных заведениях России. Юридический факультет МГУ очень высоко оценивает работу талант- ливого коллектива авторов и считает, что их содержательный, оригиналь- ный и интересный труд — цикл учебных пособий Just English — будет вос- требован широкой читательской аудиторией. Доктор юридических наук, профессор МГУ им. М.В. Ломоносова Владимир Алексеевич Томсинов: Учебное пособие написано коллективом авторов — ведущих специа- листов Московского Государственного Университета им. М.В. Ломоносо- ва. Методика обучения, нашедшая свое воплощение в пособии, подкрепле- на многолетним опытом преподавания английского языка на юридическом факультете МГУ. Постоянно возрастающая потребность в квалифицированных юриди- ческих кадрах обусловлена экономическими изменениями в российском обществе. С увеличением внешнеторговой активности Российской Федера-
Отзывы о серии JUST ENGLISH IX ции и с вовлечением в таковую все большего количества субъектов знание иностранных языков становится для юристов необходимым инструментом в их повседневной деятельности. Большая часть делового общения с иност- ранными контрагентами происходит на английском языке. В связи с этим пособие “Just English. Английский для юристов. Базовый курс ” имеет все предпосылки для того, чтобы стать настольной книгой не только студентов, но и практиков — юристов и экономистов. Старший преподаватель кафедры русского языка и литературы Московского института иностранных языков Людмила Никитична Стефанова: .. .Языковой вкус, изящество мысли, мажор, юмор, уважение к читате- лю и знанию — сочетание этих достоинств создает уникальное для учебных изданий качество — собственную интонацию, которая располагает студен- та к участию в диалоге, высвечивая один из смыслов названия серии — это ведь “только английский” и постичь его вам вполне по силам. На языке ми- мики этой интонации соответствует добрая улыбка интеллигентного чело- века, на языке человеческих взаимоотношений — возможность найти ра- зумное и изящное решение непростой проблемы. Читатель Just English обнаруживает, что юриспруденция является не только областью специальных знаний, но и непосредственно соприкасается с каждым из нас; что, к примеру, Хартия Вольностей или Кодекс Наполеона связаны с такими актуальными проблемами, как права личности или отмена смертной казни. Не дидактическими приемами, а выбором материала, кру- гом обсуждаемых проблем авторы подводят учащихся к мысли о том, что юриспруденция — первостепенная основа человеческого общежития и не- отъемлемая составляющая цивилизации. Так реализуется в.данной серии про- светительско-воспитательная цель, являющаяся сверхзадачей всякого фун- даментального учебного издания. Каждая книга Just English читается с зах- ватывающим и благодарным интересом.
ПРЕДИСЛОВИЕ АВТОРОВ “The Best of Just English” — это новое, улучшенное и дополненное издание серии учебников Just English. Уникальность этой книги заключает- ся в том, что в ней под одной обложкой собраны наиболее популярные учеб- ные пособия серии Just English, широко используемые на юридических фа- культетах в ВУЗах России и СНГ: Базовый курс, 101 Texts on Law и Clones are Coming. Предлагаемое учебное пособие рассчитано на широкую аудиторию специалистов, изучающих английский язык в связи с правовой специально- стью. В учебник включены современные профессионально-ориентированные материалы из правовых и общественно-политических источников Великоб- ритании и США, обработанные для студентов юридического профиля. Тек- сты сборника позволяют овладеть правовой лексикой, на аутентичном мате- риале изучить основные понятия юриспруденции, узнать об истории и функ- ционировании государственных, политических и судебных структур Вели- кобритании и США, а также развить столь необходимые для юриста-про- фессионала навыки анализа текста и ведения дискуссии. В соответствии с требованиями учебных программ юридических ВУЗов все учебные пособия, включенные в данный сборник, строятся по принципам комплексности и интенсивности с применением новейших средств и методов преподавания. Комплексный подход и междисциплинар- ные связи позволяют учитывать степень знакомства студентов с обсуждае- мой проб-лематикой на родном языке. Интенсивность достигается за счет предоставления разнообразных текстов и заданий различного объема и сте- пени сложности в пределах одного раздела. Современные методы дают воз- можность последовательно провести студентов по разделам специальной лек- сики, сформировать основные навыки работы с литературой по специально- сти и использовать полученные знания для беседы и дискуссии на изучен- ные темы. БАЗОВЫЙ КУРС Базовый курс позволяет обучать студентов с различным уровнем зна- ний и обеспечивает широкие возможности аудиторной и самостоятельной работы. Правовая лексика вводится тематически параллельно с соответству- ющими курсами лекций на русском языке, закрепляется в разнообразных упражнениях и находит свое применение в дискуссиях и ролевых играх.
Предисловие XI Учебник состоит из пяти глав и хрестоматии. • В первой главе обсуждаются общие проблемы права и дается истори- ческий обзор правовых систем. • Во второй главе детально рассматриваются вопросы криминологии и криминалистики. • Третья глава посвящена правоохранительным органам и их функци- онированию. • В четвертой главе анализируются стадии и методы судебного раз- бирательства. • Пятая глава рассматривает проблемы исправительных учреждений. • Хрестоматия содержит обширный материал для дополнительного изучения, включающий выдержки из оригинальных правовых документов, биографии великих философов права и другие тексты. В главах содержатся увлекательные рубрики It’s Interesting to Know и Just for Fun. 101 TEXTS ON LAW. ДЛЯ БУДУЩИХ ЮРИСТОВ Изучение права предполагает работу с первоисточниками на языке оригинала и анализ текста. Поэтому 101 Texts on Law, представляющий со- бой сборник текстов по истории и теории права англоговорящих стран, дает возможность ознакомить будущих студентов с концептами и терминологи- ей права на английском языке. Данные материалы, тесно интегрированные по содержанию с курсами истории и теории права зарубежных стран, де- монстрируют логику исторического развития правовых и политических си- стем Великобритании и США, а также освещают современную правовую ситуацию. Пособие состоит из двух частей. • В первом разделе представлены общие методические рекомендации по работе с текстом, а также образец разбора и анализа текста. • Второй раздел содержит оригинальные тексты по темам: формы прав- ления; исторические корни государственно-правовых систем Великобрита- нии, США и России; особенности современных парламентарных систем и права и свободы граждан. После каждого текста приводятся вопросы по его содержанию. Методические рекомендации по работе с текстами, образцы анализа и перевода текста в первом разделе этого пособия позволяют использовать данные материалы как практикум по переводу спецтекстов и призваны об- легчить работу тех, кто изучает правовой английский самостоятельно или с целью поступления в ВУЗ.
XII Предисловие CLONES ARE COMING. THEORIES, FACTS AND OPINIONS FOR DISCUSSION Языковая компетентность юриста предполагает способность вести бе- седу на профессиональные темы, участвовать в дискуссии и вступать в по- лемику. Именно поэтому во всех учебных пособиях серииEnglish боль- шое внимание уделяется формированию и развитию навыков публичного выступления. Поводом для таких обсуждений могут стать любые актуальные вопро- сы, которые в изобилии предоставляет современная социальная, политичес- кая и научная жизнь. Одной из весьма интересных тем — клонированию — посвящено пособие серии Just English “Clones are Coming”. Так как материалы пособия в основном взяты из периодических изда- ний, они полемичны и стимулируют “порождение спонтанной и подготов- ленной речи”, что является одним из важнейших элементов в подготовке студентов. В книге уделяется особое внимание лексическим средствам и риторическим приемам ведения дискуссий, для чего были специально раз- работаны рубрики Terms of discussion; Question time; Words, -words, -words...; Means of discussion; Time to talk. Тема моральных и правовых аспектов кло- нирования ранее не освещалась в учебной литературе, что позволяет совме- щать развитие коммуникативных навыков с освоением новой экстралингви- стической реальности. * * ♦ Книга “The Best of Just English”. Английский для юристов подго- товлена профессорско-преподавательским составом факультета иностран- ных языков МГУ им. М.В.Ломоносова на основе учебной программы курса английского языка для юридических ВУЗов. Все материалы, включенные в учебное пособие “The Best of Just English”. Английский для юристов, прошли апробацию на занятиях со студентами различных групп и уровней юридического факультета МГУ им. М.В.Ломоносова.
CONTENTS БАЗОВЫЙ КУРС CHAPTER I. LAW WORLDWIDE.........................................5 Unit 1. The Need for Law ....................................6 Unit 2. The First Laws: Laws of Babylon ................... 10 Unit 3. The First Laws: Ancient Greece and Rome............ 14 Unit 4. The Foundation of British Law: The Magna Carta .... 18 Unit 5. The Foundation of British Law: Habeas Corpus Act ...21 Unit 6. The Foundation of British Law: The Petition of Right and the Bill of Rights ......24 Unit 7. The European Law the 19th Century: Napoleon’s Code .27 CHAPTER IL CRIME AND PUNISHMENT.................................31 Unit 1. The Study of Crime..................................32 Unit 2. Crimes and Criminals ...............................38 Unit 3. The Causes of Crime ................................40 Unit 4. Punishment .........................................45 Unit 5. The Purpose of State Punishment ....................49 Unit 6. Treatment of Criminals .............................51 Unit 7. Capital Punishment: History ........................57 Unit 8. Capital Punishment: For and Against ................62 CHAPTER III. LAW ENFORCEMENT ..................................69 Unit 1. The History of Police Forces........................70 Unit 2. The Organisation of Police Forces ..................73 Unit 3. Police Powers ......................................79 Unit 4. Police and the Public...............................88 Unit 5. Scotland Yard ......................................96 Unit 6. Police Techniques .............................. 101 CHAPTER IV. FAIR TRIAL: THE JURY............................ 109 Unit 1. Origins of the Jury............................... 110 Unit 2. Jury Duty......................................... 114
XIV Contents Unit 3. Selection of the Trial Jury ............................ 120 Unit 4. In the Courtroom ....................................... 126 Unit 5. Kinds of Cases.......................................... 133 Unit 6. Steps of the Trial ..................................... 139 Unit 7. The Value of Juries .................................... 145 CHAPTER V. IMPRISONMENT: RETRIBUTION OR REHABILITATION? ...................................... 153 Unit 1. Penal and Correctional Institutions throughout History . 154 Unit 2. Prison Population ...................................... 162 Unit 3. Prison Life ............................................ 167 Unit 4. Alternatives to Prison ................................. 174 Unit 5. Rehabilitation ......................................... 180 READER .............................................................. 189 Part I. Famous Legal Documents throughout History ................... 190 1. Hammurabi’s Code of Laws (1758 B.C.) ........................ 190 2. The Laws of William the Conqueror (1066-1087)................ 192 3. The Magna Charta (1215) ..................................... 193 4. The Petition of Right (1628) ................................ 199 5. The English Bill of Rights (1689) ........................... 202 6. The US Declaration of Independence (1776) ................... 207 7. The US Bill of Rights (1791) .................................210 8. European Prison Rules (1990s)................................ 211 Part II. Philosophers of Law .........................................218 Part III. Notorious Criminals ........................................223 Part IV. Famous Detectives ...........................................239 Part V. The Stupidest Criminals ......................................242 101 TEXTS OIN LAW Introduction for Teachers and Students................................253 The Forms of Government...............................................269 1. Autocracy ....................................................270 2. Monarchy......................................................271 3. Western Monarchies ...........................................272 4. Oligarchy ....................................................273 5. Democracy.....................................................274 6. Elements of Democracy.........................................275
Contents XV 7. Characteristics of Democracy .............................276 8. The Soil of Democracy ....................................277 The Roots of British Government....................................279 9. The Anglo Saxon Kings.....................................280 10. Alfred the Great.........................................281 11. William the Conqueror ....................................282 12. John I...................................................283 13. The Origin of the Magna Carta ...........................284 14. The Contents of the Magna Carta .........................285 15. Legal and Constitutional Developments in Britain ........286 16. The Plantagenets ........................................287 17. The Tudors ..............................................288 18. Henry VI ................................................289 19. Henry VIII ..............................................290 20. Elizabeth I .............................................291 21. Charles I and the Civil War..............................292 22. The Royalists and the Parliamentarians...................293 23. The End of the Civil War.................................294 24. The Development of Parliament ...........................295 25. Charles II...............................................296 26. James II and the Glorious Revolution ....................297 27. The Petition of Right and the Bill of Rights ............298 28. William of Orange and Anne...............................299 29. George III ..............................................300 30. Queen Victoria...........................................301 The Roots of American Government ..................................303 31. The Lost Colony .........................................304 32. The Jamestown Settlers ..................................305 33. The First Settlements....................................306 34. John Smith...............................................307 35. Pocahontas...............................................308 36. The Captain and the Princess ............................309 37. The Indian Self-Government in North America .............310 38. Government in the Colonies ............................. 311 39. Colonial Self-Government.................................312 40. Colonial Legislatures....................................313 41. British Heritage and American Colonies...................314 42. The Magna Carta and its American Legacy .................315 43. The Roots of American Government.........................316 44. Boston Tea Party ........................................317 45. The Story of a Bell .....................................318
XVI Contents 46. The Liberty Bell .......................................319 47. The Ideas of John Locke ................................320 48. George Washington ......................................321 49. Thomas Jefferson........................................322 50. Benjamin Franklin.......................................323 51. Patrick Henry...........................................324 52. Abraham Lincoln.........................................325 The Roots of Russian Law..........................................327 53. Kievan Rus .............................................328 54. Early Russian Law and Mongol Subjugation ...............329 55. Early Russian Law.......................................330 56. Litigation in Muscovy ..................................331 57. Princely Justice in Muscovy ............................332 58. Early Russian Judicial Practice ........................333 59. Law Reform in Russia ...................................334 60. Peter the Great.........................................335 61. Russian Law in the 18th Century ........................336 62. Russian Law in the 19th Century ........................337 63. The Pre-Revolutionary Heritage .........................338 The British Government of Today ..................................339 64. The Governmental Model in the UK........................340 65. The British Parliament..................................341 66. Monarch’s Powers in Britain.............................342 67. The Role of the Monarch in Britain......................343 68. Criticism of the British Monarchy.......................344 69. Why the Monarchy Serves the British Best................345 70. Download the Queen......................................346 71. How Popular is the Monarch?.............................347 72. The History of Speakership in Britain...................348 73. The Speaker of the House of Commons ....................349 74. The Speaker’s Duties....................................350 75. Debate in the House of Commons..........................351 76. Unparliamentary Language ...............................352 77. The English Legal System................................353 78. The English Constitution................................354 The American Government of Today .................................355 79. The Concept of Bicameral Legislature ...................356 80. US Congress ............................................357 81. US Congress Rules ......................................358
Contents XVII 82. Congress and the President .............................359 83. Lawmaking in the Senate.................................360 84. The Senate’s Daily Sessions ............................361 85. The Senate’s Working Day ...............................362 86. The History of Impeachment..............................363 87. Impeachment ............................................364 88. Voting in the USA ......................................365 89. Parties and Party Systems ..............................366 90. The Origins of the Civil Service System.................367 91. The American Civil Service .............................368 On Rights and Liberties...........................................369 92. Rights and Responsibilities of American Citizens........370 93. Freedom of Religion ....................................371 94. Freedom of Speech ......................................372 95. Freedom of the Press....................................373 96. Free Press and Fair Trial ..............................374 97. Mass Media in a Democratic Society .....................375 98. Protecting the Rights of the Accused....................376 99. Cruel and Unusual Punishment ...........................377 100. The Miranda Warning ...................................378 101. Watergate..............................................379 CLONES ARE COMING. THEORIES, FACTS AND OPINIONS FOR DISCUSSION Unit 1. Separating Facts from Fiction ............................383 • Breakthrough of the Century........................383 • Hello, Dolly! .....................................384 • Just Facts.........................................385 • The Words of Wisdom ...............................386 Means of discussion: Cause, Reason, Purpose and Result ...........390 Unit 2. Yesterday’s Never is Today’s Why Not: A Glimpse of History .............................................392 • The History of Cloning.............................393 Means of discussion: Success and Failure..........................402
XVIII Contents Unit 3. A Storm of Controversy: Moral Aspect of Cloning ...........405 • Cloning and Beyond ................................405 • Society versus the Individual .....................408 • Should We Be Cloning Around?.......................410 Means of discussion: Belief and Opinion............................417 • Soul versus Body Debate ...........................420 Unit 4. The Case for Cloning: Legal Aspect.........................421 • What Do You Do with a Genie out of the Bottle? ....421 • To Ban or Not to Ban ..............................422 • Forbidden Fruit? ..................................425 Means of discussion: Concession and Contrast.......................429 • Clones’ Rights Debate .............................432 • Fiction or Future? Be a Detective! ................433 Unit 5. A Step Too Far: Obsessed with Cloning .....................436 • Americans for Cloning Elvis........................437 • Christians for Cloning Jesus ......................438 • More of You and Me.................................439 Means of discussion: Convictions and Obsessions ...................443 • Clones are Coming (Role Play) .....................445 Unit 6. Just for Fun: Double the Trouble...........................447 • Welcome to Clone-All®..............................447 Glossary...........................................................458 Appendix: Supplementary Materials .................................463 • Russian Articles for Rendering ....................463 List of Reference..................................................492
Law Like Love by W. H. Auden Law, say the gardeners, is the sun, Law is the one All gardeners obey To-morrow, yesterday, to-day. [•••] Law, says the priest with a priestly look, Expounding to an unpriestly people, Law is the words in my priestly book, Law is my pulpit and my steeple. Law, says the judge as he looks down his nose, Speaking clearly and most severely, Law is as I’ve told you before, Law is as you know I suppose, Law is but let me explain it once more, Law is The Law. Yet law-abiding scholars write: Law is neither wrong nor right, Law is only crimes Punished by places and by times, Law is the clothes men wear Anytime, anywhere, Law is Good morning and Good night. Others say, Law is our Fate; Others say, Law is our State; Others say, others say Law is no more, Law has gone away. And always the loud angry crowd, Very angry and very loud, Law is We, And always the soft idiot softly Me.
If we, dear, know we know no more Than they about the Law, If I no more than you Know what we should and should not do Except that all agree Gladly or miserably That the Law is And that all know this [...] No more than they can we suppress The universal wish to guess Or slip out of our own position Into an unconcerned condition. Although I can at least confine Your vanity and mine To stating timidly A timid similarity, We shall boast anyway: Like love I say. Like love we don’t know where or why, Like love we can’t compel or fly, Like love we often weep, Like love we seldom keep.



UNIT 1 THE NEED FOR LAW BRAINSTORM • Rules, laws, regulations, law codes • Lawgivers, legislators • Civil law, criminal law • Government What is your understanding of these words? Give examples. Law and Society Mr. Jones, having murdered his wife, was burying her in the garden one night, when his neighbour, hearing the noise, asked him what he was doing. “Just burying the cat,” said Mr. Jones. “Funny sort of time to bury a cat,” said the neighbour. “Funny sort of cat,” said Mr. Jones. Now it is obvious to everyone that, in a community such as the one in which we live, some kind of law is necessary to try to prevent people like Mr. Jones from killing their wives. When the world was at a very primitive stage, there was no such law, and, if a man chose to kill his wife or if a woman succeeded in killing her husband, that was their own business and no one interfered officially. But, for a very long time now, members of every community have made laws for themselves in self-protection. Otherwise it would have meant that the stronger man could have done what he liked with the weaker, and bad men could have joined together and terrorized the whole neighbourhood. If it were not for the law, you could not go out in broad daylight without the fear of being kidnapped, robbed or murdered. There are far, far more
Базовый курс 7 good people in the world than bad, but there are enough of the bad to make law necessary in the interests of everyone. There is no difficulty in understanding this but it is just as important to understand that law is not necessary just because there are bad people in the world. If we were all as good as we ought to be, laws would still be necessary. If we never told lies, never took anything that didn’t belong to us, never omitted to do anything that we ought to do and never did anything that we ought not to do, we should still require a set of rules of behaviour, in other words laws, to enable us to live in any kind of satisfactory state. How is one good man in a motor-car to pass another good man also in a motor-car coming in the opposite direction, unless there is some rule of the road? People sometimes hover in front of one another when they are walking on the pavement before they can pass, and they may even collide. Not much harm is done then, but, if two good men in motor-cars going in the opposite directions hover in front of one another, not knowing which side to pass, the result will probably be that there will be two good men less in the world. So you can see that there must be laws, however good we may be. Unfortunately, however, we are none of us always good and some of us are bad, or at any rate have our bad moments, and so the law has to provide for all kinds of possibilities. Suppose you went to a greengrocer and bought some potatoes and found on your return home that they were mouldy or even that some of them were stones. What could you do if there were no laws on the subject? In the absence of law you could only rely upon the law of the jungle. You could go back to the shop, demand proper potatoes and hit the shopkeeper on the nose if he refused to give them to you. You might then look round the shop to try to find some decent potatoes. While you were doing this, the shopkeeper might hit you on the back of the neck with a pound weight. Altogether not a very satisfactory morning shopping. Or you might pay your money to go to see a film at a cinema. You might go inside, sit down and wait. When the cinema was full, there might be flashed on the screen: “You’ve had it, Chums”. And that might be the whole of the entertainment. If there were no law, the manager could safely remain on the premises and, as you went out, smile at you and say: “Hope
8 The Best of Just English you’ve enjoyed the show, sir.” That is to say, he could do this safely if he were bigger than you or had a well-armed bodyguard. Every country tries, therefore, to provide laws which will help its people to live safely and as comfortably as possible. This is not at all an easy thing to do, and no country has been successful in producing laws which are entirely satisfactory. But we are far better off with the imperfect laws which we have, than if we had none at all. TASK 1. Work in groups. Find in the text law-related words and expressions. Compare your lists with those of the other students. In your opinion, which of the items are legal terms? Consult a legal dictionary. TASK 2. Find in the text the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. самозащита 2. телохранитель 3. общество 4. правила поведения 5. закон джунглей 6. несовершенные законы 7. при свете дня 8. причинять вред 9. предусмотреть все возможности 10. полагаться на кого-либо 11. требовать TASK 3. Translate the following passage into English paying special attention to the link words and expressions in bold type: Очевидно, что закон необходим в интересах всего общества. Иначе людям пришлось бы жить по закону джунглей. К сожалению, создать совершенные законы не просто. Следовательно, каждое сообщество пытается установить свои собственные правила поведения. Однако закон не может удовлетворить всех. В любом случае, несовершенные законы лучше беззакония.
Базовый курс 9 TASK 4. Make your own chain of arguments with the link words and expressions listed in Task 3, using the following vocabulary: • to prevent from • self-protection • to demand smth. • to rely upon smb./smth. • successful • to provide for • to require • to suppose TASK 5. Which parts of the text correspond to the following headings? Put them in a logical order: □ considering possibilities □ historical background □ conclusion □ examples □ joke DISCUSSION Use the structural pattern built up in Task 5 to make a speech on one of the following topics: • Laws haven’t changed since primeval times. • However hard people try, laws are always insufficient. • Laws are not for ordinary people, they are for lawyers. • All laws are situational. They suit only a particular place at a particular time. • There is some eternal law. It is good for all times and places.
10 The Best of Just English Just for Fun When asked to explain the difference between an ordinary citizen and a lawyer, a well-known barrister explained, “If an ordinary citizen gave you an orange, he would say, “I give you this orange.” But if a lawyer gave you an orange, he would say, “I hereby give, grant and convey to you all my interest, right, title and claim of and in this orange, together with all its rind, skin, juice and pulp, and all right and advantage therein with full power to bite, cut, suck, or otherwise eat or consume the said orange, or give away or dispose of to any third party the said orange, with or without its rind, skin, juice and pulp, subject to any amendments subsequently introduced or drawn up to this agreement.” UNIT 2 THE FIRST LAWS: LAWS OF BABYLON The Birth of Law Rules and laws — and the conventions or customs from which they are descended — have been a part of human life ever since our ancestors first began to live in large and settled groups. But our knowledge is vague of laws that were in effect before the invention of writing in about 3500 B.C. The earliest known legal text was written by Ur-Nammu, a king of the Mesopotamian city of Ur, in about 2100 B.C. It dealt largely with compensation for bodily injuries, and with the penalties for witchcraft and runaway slaves. TASK 1. Find in the text the words that mean the following: • the use of magic power, especially with the aid of evil spirits • a punishment imposed for a violation of law or rule • an accepted social custom or practice • payment for damage or loss, restitution • one from whom a person is descended • harm or damage done or suffered
Базовый курс И TASK 2. Answer the following questions: 1. Why is it difficult to judge about the earliest laws? 2. Where and why did the first laws appear? 3. What issues did the early laws emphasise? Why? TASK 3. The word LEGAL has the following meanings in Russian: 1) юридический legal person — юридическое лицо 2) правовой legal text — правовой текст 3) судебный legal action — судебный иск 4) законный, дозволенный законом legal owner — законный владелец 5) легальный legal activities — правомерная, законная деятельность Match the following English expressions with their Russian equivalents: 1) legal activities а) законные права 2) legal address b) законный владелец 3) legal advice с) имеющий законную силу 4) legal age d) использовать свое законное право 5) legal costs е) история права 6) legal decision f) консультация юриста 7) legal document g) правовая защита 8) legal entity h) правовой документ 9) legal ethics i) правовой статус 10) legal expert j) правомерная, 11) legal history законная деятельность 12) legal language к) профессиональная этика юриста 13) legal owner 1) решение суда 14) legal procedure т) совершеннолетие 15) legal protection п) стать юристом 16) legal rights о) судебные издержки 17) legal status р) судопроизводство 18) of legal force q) юридическая терминология 19) to enjoy one’s legal rights г) юридический адрес 20) to enter the legal profession s) юридическое лицо t) юрисконсульт; юридический советник
12 The Best of Just English BRAINSTORM Work in groups. What associations does the word ‘Babylon ’ call to mind? Make a list of ideas and compare your notes. TASK 4. Read the text and write down Russian equivalents for the words and expressions in bold type: Laws of Babylon One of the most detailed ancient legal codes was drawn up in about 1758 B.C. by Hammurabi, a king of Babylonia. The entire code, consisting of 282 paragraphs, was carved into a great stone pillar, which was set up in a temple to the Babylonian god Marduk so that it could be read by every citizen. The pillar, lost for centuries after the fall of Babylon in the 16th century B.C., was rediscovered by a French archaeologist in 1901 amid the ruins of the Persian city of Susa. Hammurabi’s words were still legible. The pillar is now in the Louvre museum in Paris. The laws laid down by Hammurabi were more extensive than any that had gone before. They covered crime, divorce and marriage, the rights of slave owners and slaves, the settlement of debts, inheritance and property contracts; there were even regulations about taxes and the prices of goods. Punishments under the code were often harsh. The cruel principle of revenge was observed: an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, which meant that criminals had to receive as punishment precisely those injuries and damages they had inflicted upon their victims. Not only murderers but also thieves and false accusers faced the death penalty. And a child who hit his father could expect to lose the hand that struck the blow.
Базовый курс 13 The code outlawed private blood feuds and banned the tradition by which a man could kidnap and keep the woman he wanted for his bride. In addition, the new laws took account of the circumstances of the offender as well as of the offence. So a lower-ranking citizen who lost a civil case would be fined less than an aristocrat in the same position — though he would also be awarded less if he won. Nevertheless, Hammurabi’s laws represented an advance on earlier tribal customs, because the penalty could not be harder than the crime. TASK 5. Find in the text the English equivalents for the following law-related words and expressions. What concepts bring these groups of words together? вор клеветник правонарушитель правонарушение преступление кровная месть наносить ущерб наносить увечья похищать смертная казнь наказание штрафовать получать компенсацию брак развод налоги наследство долги цены на товары гражданское дело права рабов имущественные контракты TASK 6. Answer the following questions: 1. Why do you think Hammurabi decided to have his laws carved into a pillar? 2. Why was the pillar set up in a temple? 3. What spheres of human life were covered by Hammurabi’s code? Explain the choice. 4. How do you understand the principle “an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth”? 5. In your opinion, were punishments always fair? 6. Why do you think people of different ranks were treated differently by Hammurabi’s code?
14 The Best of Just English TASK 7. Translate the following passage into English paying special attention to the words and expressions in bold type: Кодекс Хаммурапи В 1901 году французские археологи обнаружили каменный столб среди руин персидского города Сузы. Текст, высеченный на столбе, был древнейшим сводом законов. Он был составлен Хаммурапи, царем Вавилона, в XVIII столетии до н. э. Кодекс Хаммурапи состоит из 282 статей. Установленный в храме вавилонского бога Мардука, “столб законов” должен был служить правосудию и одновременно напоминать: законы должны знать все. Кодекс охватывал все сферы жизни. Он ставил вне закона кровную месть, убийство, похищение невесты. Наказания за них были суровы. В основе Кодекса лежит идея талиона: наказание должно быть “равным” преступлению — “око за око, зуб за зуб”. В соответ- ствии с кодексом, если человек, обвинивший другого в краже, не мог привести свидетелей, подтверждающих его слова, ему грозила смерть как клеветнику. Кодекс также охватывал вопросы имущества и наследства. Хаммурапи устанавливал денежный штраф, при назначении кото- рого учитывалось как само правонарушение, так и социальное положение граждан. UNIT 3 THE FIRST LAWS: ANCIENT GREECE AND ROME TASK 1. Read the text and write down Russian equivalents for the words and expressions in bold type: The Legal Heritage of Greece and Rome The ancient Greeks were among the first to develop a concept of law that separated everyday law from religious beliefs. Before the Greeks most civilizations attributed their laws to their gods or goddesses. Instead, the Greeks believed that laws were made by the people for the people.
Базовый курс 15 In the seventh century B.C., Draco* drew up Greece’s first comprenensive written code of laws. Under Draco’s code death was the punishment for most offences. Thus, the term draconian usually applies to extremely harsh measures. Several decades passed before Solon — poet, military hero, and ultimately Athens’ lawgiver — devised a new code of laws. T rial by jury, an ancient Greek tradition was retained, but enslaving debtors was prohibited as were most of the harsh punishments of Draco’s code. Under Solon’s law citizens of Athens were eligible to serve in the assembly and courts were established in which they could appeal government decisions. What the Greeks may have contributed to the Romans was the concept of “natural law.” In essence, natural law was based on the belief that certain basic principles are above the laws of a nation. These principles arise from the nature of people. The concept of natural law and the development of the first true legal system had a profound effect on the modem world. TASK 2. Complete the following table with the appropriate verb or noun forms: Verb Noun to attribute belief punishment to develop offence to separate decision to apply government to prohibit to serve to establish to appeal to refer to * Draco — [ dreikou] — Драконт (т.ж. Трахонт), афинский законодатель 2 — 9099
16 The Best of Just English TASK 3. Work in teams. Make up a logical law-related story containing both verbs and nouns from Task 2. Use no fewer than 7 words. TASK 4. Answer the following questions: 1. What does the ancient Greek concept of law comprise? 2. Why were the first laws mainly attributed to divine powers? 3. What is the origin and the meaning of the word “draconian”? 4. How do you understand the concept of “natural law”? 5. What was Solon’s contribution to ancient law? TASK 5. Read the text and use the words in bold type to render the text in Task 6: Solon (b. 630 — d. 560 B.C.) Solon, the Athenian statesman, is known as one of the Seven Wise Men of Greece. He ended exclusive aristocratic control of the government, substituted a system of control by the wealthy, and introduced a new and more humane law code. He was also a noted poet. Unfortunately it was not until the 5th century B.C. that accounts of his life and works began to be put together, mostly on the evidence of his poems and his law code. Although certain details have a legendary ring, the main features of his story seem to be reliable. Solon was of noble descent but moderate means. He first became prominent in about 600 B.C. The early 6th century was a troubled time for the Athenians. Society was dominated by an aristocracy of birth, who owned the best land, monopolized the government, and were themselves split into rival factions. The social, economic, and political evils might well have culminated in a revolution and subsequent tyranny (dictatorship), as they had in other Greek states, had it not been for Solon, to whom Athenians of all classes turned in the hope of a generally satisfactory solution of their problems. Because he believed in moderation and in an ordered society in which each class had its proper place and function, his solution was not revolution but reform.
Базовый курс 17 Solon’s great contribution to the future good of Athens was his new code of laws. The firstwritten code at Athens, that of Draco, was still in force. Draco’s laws were shockingly severe (hence the term draconian) — so severe that they were said to have been written not in ink but in blood. On the civil side they permitted enslavement for debt, and death seems to have been the penalty for almost all criminal offenses. Solon revised every statute except that on homicide and made Athenian law altogether more humane. TASK 6. Render the following text into English using the vocabulary and information from the texts above: Драконт Драконт— афинский законодатель, чьи крайне суровые законы предусматривали только одно наказание— смерть— как за незначи- тельные нарушения, так и за тяжкие преступления, совершенные в Афинах. Его имя теперь связывают со всем жестоким и безжалост- ным — ‘драконовские меры’, ‘драконовы законы’, ‘драконовский кодекс’. Кодекс Драконта, который принято датировать 621 г. до н.э., не был первым записанным сводом афинских законов, но он, возможно, был первым всеобъемлющим кодексом или переработкой предыду- щих законов. Позднее Солон отменил законы, созданные Драконтом, и издал новые, оставив лишь прежнее наказание за убийство. CREATIVE WRITING Since по law is perfect, ancient laws left much to be desired. Consult the READERfor the extracts from Hammurabi’s code. Work in teams to ‘amend ’ the ancient legal code. Use the active vocabulary from the Unit. Present your ideas to the rest of the class. 2*
18 The Best of Just English UNIT 4 THE FOUNDATION OF BRITISH LAW: THE MAGNA CARTA BRAINSTORM Name legal documents of constitutional importance, which have affected modem legal systems. TASK I. Read the text and write down Russian equivalents for the words and expressions in bold type: The Magna Carta At the heart of the English system are two principles of government — limited government and representative government. The idea that government was not all-powerful first appeared in the Magna Carta*, or Great Charter, that King John** signed in 1215 under the threat of civil war. Earlier kings of England had issued charters, making promises to their barons. But these were granted by, not exacted from the king and were very generally phrased. Later the tension between the Kings and the nobility increased. Since 1199 John’s barons had to be promised their rights. It is, therefore, not surprising that Stephen Langton, archbishop of Canterbury, directed baronial unrest into a demand for a solemn grant of liberties by the king. The document known as the Articles of the Barons was at last agreed upon and became the text from which the final version of the charter was drafted and sealed by John on June 15, 1215. * Magna Carta — Великая Хартия Вольностей ** King John — Иоанн Безземельный, английский король (1199—1216)
Базовый курс 19 The Magna Carta established the principle of limited government, in which the power of the monarch, or government, was limited, not absolute. This document provided for protection against unjust punishment and the loss of life, liberty, and property except according to law. It stipulated that no citizen could be punished or kept in prison without a fair trial. Under the Magna Carta, the king agreed that certain taxes could not be levied without popular consent. Although the Magna Carta was originally intended to protect aristocracy and not the ordinary citizens, it came in time to be regarded as a cornerstone of British liberties. It is one of the oldest written constitutional papers. TASK 2. The word GOVERNMENT has the following meanings in Russian: 1) государственная власть executive government — исполнительная власть judicial government — судебная власть legislative government — законодательная власть 2) управление, руководство to carry out the government of a state — осуществлять управление государством 3) форма правления, государственное устройство, полити- ческий строй democratic /republican / federal / parliamentary government — де- мократическая /республиканская / федеральная / парламентская форма правления constitutional government — конституционная форма правления a system of government — система правления 4) правительство, правительственный аппарат Liberal /Labour / Conservative Government — либеральное /лей- бористское /консервативное правительство to form the government — сформировать правительство Match the following English expressions with their Russian equivalents: 1) arbitrary government 2) authoritarian government 3) colonial form of government 4) government investigation 5) government of the day 6) government offices а) действующее правительство b) местное самоуправление с) военная администрация d) смешанная форма правления е) парламентское правление f) правительство Её Величества
20 The Best of Just English 7) government official 8) government party 9) govemment(al) department 10) govemment(al) regulation 11) government’s term of office 12) Her Majesty’s Government 13) local government 14) military government 15) mixed government 16) organs of government 17) parliamentary government 18) presidential government 19) provisional government 20) representative government 21) to dissolve the government g) правящая партия h) правительственные учреждения i) представительная форма правления j) временное правительство к) распустить /расформировать правительство 1) органы государственного управления ш)автократия п) президентская власть о) авторитарная форма правления р) правительственное ведомство q) правительственное расследование г) колониальная форма государственного устройства s) постановление правительства t) правительственный чиновник и) срок полномочий правительства Use the expressions above to make sentences of your own. TASK 3. Answer the following questions: 1. What were the two basic principles of the English system of government at the beginning of the 13th century? How do you understand these principles? 2. What political situation necessitated the granting of the Magna Carta? 3. What provisions did the Magna Carta contain? 4. Who enjoyed the rights granted by the Magna Carta? TASK 4. Render the following passage into English paying special attention to the words and expressions in bold type: Великая Хартия Вольностей Великая Хартия Вольностей—это грамота, подписанная в 1215 году английским королем Иоанном I. Она составлена на латинском языке и содержит 63 статьи. Этот документ был подписан в результа-
Базовый курс 21 те недовольства баронов усилением королевской власти, налого- вым гнетом и неудачной внешней политикой короля. Большинство статей отражало и защищало интересы аристократии. Однако дру- гие сословия также получили значительные права. Великая Хартия Вольностей гарантировала соблюдение коро- лем определенных обязательств по отношению к баронам, запреща- ла королю взимать налоги без согласия подданных. Хартия поло- жила начало свободе личности. Ни один человек не мог быть аре- стован, заключен в тюрьму, лишен собственности или покрови- тельства законов, изгнан или подвергнут иной каре иначе, как по суду равных ему и согласно законам страны. Это был первый в истории Англии документ,ограничивающий власть короны и провозглашающий права и свободы подданных. Великая Хартия Вольностей стала краеугольным камнем англий- ских свобод. Ряд ее статей получили развитие в Акте Хабеас Корпус и Билле о правах. Великая Хартия Вольностей сыграла важнейшую роль в англий- ской истории. Она и сейчас входит в число действующих актов кон- ституции Великобритании. UNIT 5 THE FOUNDATION OF BRITISH LAW: HABEAS CORPUS ACT “Let the Body Be Brought...” In Britain, the United States and many other English-speaking countries, the law of Habeas Corpus guarantees that nobody can be held in prison without trial. Habeas Corpus became a law because of a wild party held in 1621 at the London home of a notoriously rowdy lady, Alice Robinson. When a constable appeared and asked her and her guests to quiet down, Mrs. Robinson allegedly swore at him so violently that he arrested her, and a local justice of the peace committed her to jail. When she was finally brought to trial, Mrs. Robinson’s story of her treatment in prison caused an outcry. She had been put on a punishment diet of bread and water, forced to sleep on the bare earth, stripped, and given fifty lashes. Such treatment was barbaric even by the harsh standards
22 The Best of Just English of the time; what made it worse was that Mrs. Robinson was pregnant. Public anger was so great that she was acquitted, the constable who had arrested her without a warrant was himself sent to prison, and the justice of the peace was severely reprimanded. And the case, along with other similar cases, led to the passing of the Habeas Corpus Act in Britain in 1679. The law is still on the British statute books, and a version of it is used in the United States, where the law is regarded as such an important guarantee of liberty that Article 1 of the U.S. Constitution declares that “Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended except in cases of rebellion or invasion”. Habeas Corpus is part of a Latin phrase — Habeas corpus ad subjiciendum — that means “Let the body be brought before the judge.” In effect, a writ of Habeas Corpus is an order in the name of the people (or, in Britain, of the sovereign) to produce an imprisoned person in court at once. TASK 1. Find in the text the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. мировой судья 2. ордер на арест 3. варварское отношение 4. восстание, мятеж, бунт 5. вторжение, нападение, нашествие 6. недовольство общественности 7. печально известный, пользующийся дурной славой 8. заключить в тюрьму 9. вызвать гневный протест 10. привести к принятию закона 11. получить строгий выговор 12. предстать перед судом 13. быть оправданным 14. быть приостановленным 15. от имени народа / монарха Retell the text using the words and expressions above.
Базовый курс 23 TASK 2. Work with an English-English dictionary. Find definitions of thefollowing legal terms: • trial • writ • statute Use each word in sentences of your own. TASK 3. Render the following passage into English paying special attention to the words and expressions in bold type: Хабеас Корпус Согласно данному акту любое лицо, арестованное за соверше- ние какого-либо уголовного преступления, имело право обратить- ся лично или через своего представителя к Короне с прошением о выдаче приказа “Хабеас Корпус” начальнику тюрьмы. Получив этот приказ, начальник тюрьмы был обязан доставить арестованного к судье, который проверял обоснованность его заключения под стражу. Хабеас Корпус Акт — это важнейшая гарантия гражданских прав и свобод в Англии. Согласно ему ни один свободный человек не мог быть подвергнут аресту без достаточных на то оснований. ROLE-PLAY Let the Body Be Brought! Role-play the following situation: You have been arrested and taken into custody. No warrant has been produced. Your friend or lawyer comes to see you in prison. Tell him/her about your problem and ask him/her to take appropriate steps. Appoint another student as a judge who will do justice.
24 The Best of Just English UNIT 6 THE FOUNDATION OF BRITISH LAW: THE PETITION OF RIGHT AND THE BILL OF RIGHTS TASK 1. Complete the text using the words from the box: The Petition of Right royal requests; Stuart succession; resistance; raising taxes; prevent; restricted; forced; financial control Parliament began to show more______________to the monarchy under the from 1603 by using its gradually acquired weapon of. It was influenced by the gentry and began to refuse_____________________for money. It eventually__________ Charles I to sign the Petition of Right in 1628, which further________ the monarch’s powers and was intended to____________him from__________ without Parliament’s consent. TASK 2. Translate the text below into English using the information and vocabulary from the text in Task 1: Петиция о правах Конституционное противостояние в XVII веке выразилось в появлении в 1628 году документа, известного как Петиция о правах. Нуждаясь в денежных средствах, король Карл I попытался получить деньги от своих подданных, минуя парламент. В 1628 году парла- мент заставил короля принять Петицию о правах, которая разрешала взимать налоги только с согласия парламента. Этот документ так- же гарантировал английским подданным основные права, которые не могло нарушить ни одно правительство.
Базовый курс 25 TASK 3. Read the text and write down Russian equivalents for the words and expressions in bold type: The Bill of Rights The Bill of Rights (1689) is one of the basic instruments of the British constitution, the result of the long 17th-century struggle between the Stuart kings and the English people and Parliament. The Bill of Rights provided the foundation on which the government rested after the Revolution of 1688. The Revolution settlement made monarchy clearly conditional on the will of Parliament and provided a freedom from arbitrary government of which most Englishmen were notably proud during the 18th century. The main purpose of the act was unequivocally to declare illegal various practices of James II. Among such practices proscribed were the royal prerogative of dispensing with the law in certain cases, the complete suspension of laws without the consent of Parliament, and the levying of taxes and themaintenance of a standing army in peacetime without specific parliamentary authorization. A number of clauses sought to eliminate royal interference in parliamentary matters, stressing that elections must be free and that members of Parliament must have complete freedom of speech. Certain forms of interference in the course of justice were also proscribed. The act also dealt with the proximate succession to the throne, provided the heirs were Protestants. It is the constitutional paper of great importance, which prevented the sovereign from abusing his authority. TASK 4. The word AUTHORITY has the following meanings in Russian: 1) власть supreme authority — верховная власть 2) полномочие, право, права, компетенция to act on smb.’s authority — действовать на основании получен- ных полномочий 3) pl. власти, начальство, администрация local authorities — местные власти; органы местного самоуправ- ления 4) авторитет, вес, влияние to have authority with smb. — пользоваться авторитетом у кого-л.
26 The Best of Just English 5) авторитет, крупный специалист he is an authority on law — он является авторитетом в области права 6) авторитетный источник to quote one’s authorities — ссылаться на авторитетные источ- ники Match the following English expressions with their Russian equivalents: 1) competent authority 2) law-enforcement authorities I agencies 3) lawful authority 4) on good authority 5) the authority of Parliament 6) to abuse one’s authority 7) to endue with authority 8) to gain in authority 9) to hand over one’s authority to smb. 10) to have I to exercise authority 11) to undermine smb.’s authority 12) to vest smb. with authority 13) unrestricted authority а) превышать свои полномочия b) власть /полномочия парламента с) законная власть d) из надёжного источника е) иметь /осуществлять власть f) неограниченные полномочия g) наделять полномочиями кого-л. h) облечь властью i) передавать свои полномочия кому-л. j) подрывать чей-л. авторитет к) правоохранительные органы 1) авторитетный специалист т) приобретать всё большую власть TASK 5. Render the following text into English paying special attention to the words and expressions in bold type: Билль о правах 1689 года Борьба монарха и парламента привела к революции, извест- ной под названием Славная революция 1688 года. Король Яков II был свергнут и вынужден покинуть страну. Его подозревали в желании сделать католическую религию официальной религией в Англии. В соответствии с Актом о престолонаследии (Act of Settlement), опуб- ликованным после Славной революции, принц Вильгельм Оранский и его супруга Мария взошли на трон. Условием их коронации было принятие ими английского Билля о правах. Английский Билль о правах ограничивал власть монарха, на- делив парламент решающей властью, и обеспечивал защиту анг-
Базовый курс 27 ликанской церкви от любых попыток религиозной контрреформы короля Якова II или его преемников. Английский Билль о правах заключал в себе много идей, касающихся права и государства, которые позднее нашли свое отражение в американской Декларации независимости, конституции и Билле о правах. Помимо ограничения власти монарха, документ декларировал такиетрадиционные права англичан, как право на суд присяжных, запрещение жестоких наказаний, право обращения с петициями к властям и право ношения оружия, которое, впрочем, предоставлялось лишь протес- тантам. TASK 6. Answer thefollowing questions using the information from the texts above: 1. What events preceded the Bill of Rights? 2. Why did King James II have to leave the country? 3. What documents have regulated succession to the throne since 1688? 4. How were the rights of the monarch limited by the Bill of Rights? 5. What civil rights were protected by this document? 6. What was the influence of the Bill of Rights on political thinking in America? TASK 7. Tell about the Bill of Rights using the information given in Tasks 3,4. Consult the READER for the extracts from the original text. UNIT 7 THE EUROPEAN LAW IN THE 19™ CENTURY: NAPOLEON'S CODE Napoleon’s Law The laws of much of continental Europe (particularly France), of Quebec in Canada, and of much of Latin America — along with the civil laws of Louisiana — owe their modem form largely to the work of a man who never even studied law. Napoleon Bonaparte, the Corsican soldier who became emperor of France after the French Revolution, established
28 The Best of Just English in 1800 five commissions to refine and organise the diverse legal systems of France. The result, enacted in 1804, was Napoleon’s Code. Some of its original 2,281 articles were drafted by Napoleon himself, and all were affected by his thinking, even though he was completely self-taught in legal matters. The code was a triumphant attempt to create a legal system that treated all citizens as equals without regard to their rank or previous privileges. It was also so clearly written that it could be read and understood by ordinary people at a time when only Latin scholars could make sense of the earlier laws handed down since Roman times. The code was adopted intact in most of the areas of Europe that Napoleon dominated and spread from there across the Atlantic, taking root particularly in French- speaking American communities. Many of its principles are still in force today. TASK 1. Find in the text the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. вопросы права 2. изучать право 3. различные, несхожие правовые системы 4. создать правовую систему 5. император 6. гражданское право 7. первоначальный вариант статей 8. подвергаться влиянию чьих-либо идей 9. передавать (из поколения в поколение) 10. господствовать, властвовать 11. обращаться как с равными 12. разобраться в чем-то 13. приживаться, укореняться 14. быть в силе 15. без учета привилегий Retell the text using the active vocabulary.
Базовый курс 29 TASK 2. Consult the previous texts and your legal dictionary to translate the following words and expressions into English. Make up sentences of your own, using the expressions below: • составлять проект закона • создавать, творить законы • вносить поправки в законы • принимать закон • обеспечивать соблюдение законов • приводить законы в исполнение • отменять законы • нарушать законы TASK 3. Answer the following questions: 1. What efforts did Napoleon make to reorganise the diverse legal systems of France? 2. Did Napoleon draw up the whole code himself? 3. What was so remarkable about Napoleon’s new code? 4. What were the benefits of Napoleon’s code for the ordinary people? 5. Which countries throughout the world still use the elements of Napoleon’s code? TASK 4. Render the following text into English paying special attention to the words and expressions in bold type: Одним из важнейших событий в истории мирового права ста- ло принятие кодекса Наполеона. Специальная комиссия, состоя- щая из крупнейших юристов, под руководством Наполеона в тече- ние короткого времени усовершенствовала и привела в соответ- ствие все действующие законы, постановления и местные обычаи Франции. В 1804 г. этот грандиозный свод законов, состоящий из 2281 статьи, был утвержден под названием Гражданского кодек- са. Главное в этом кодексе то, что он утверждал равенство всех перед законом, свободу совести, неприкосновенность личности и соб- ственности. Сам Наполеон хорошо понимал историческое значение своей законотворческой деятельности. “Моя истинная слава, — говорил он, — не в том, что я выиграл сорок сражений. Но то, что не может быть забыто, то, что будет жить вечно — это мой Гражданский кодекс”.
30 The Best of Just English Кодекс Наполеона пережил своего создателя. Империя распа- лась, но Франция, а вслед за ней многие другие государства Европы и Америки продолжают руководствоваться правовыми принципа- ми, изложенными в кодексе Наполеона. It’s Interesting to Know Napoleon’s Words of Wisdom • A man will fight harder for his interests than for his rights. • History is the version of past events that people have decided to agree upon. • It is the success which makes great men. • The heart of a statesman must be in his head. • From sublime to ridiculousness there is only one step. • Public morals are natural complement of all laws: they are by themselves an entire code. TASK 5. Choose one of the following topics and prepare a presentation: 1. The main points of Napoleon’s biography. 2. The great victories of Napoleon Bonaparte. 3. One hundred days of Napoleon Bonaparte. 4. The legal system of France at the time of Napoleon. REVIEW What legal codes have you studied in your classes of law? Make a report on a subject of your choice and present it in class. Use the patterns and vocabulary from the Chapter. _____________:____________________________________________________>
CHAPTER II CRIME AND PUNISHMENT к
UNIT 1 THE STUDY OF CRIME BRAINSTORM • Misdeed, misconduct • Crime, offence, wrongdoing • Unlawful act, violation of the law, lawbreaking • Harm, sin What is your understanding of these words? Give examples. TASK 1. Match the following headings with the sections of the text below: • History • Application • Techniques • Subject • Objectives Criminology (1) Criminology is a social science dealing with the nature, extent, and causes of crime; the characteristics of criminals and their organizations; the problems of apprehending and convicting offenders; the operation of prisons and other correctional institutions; the rehabilitation of convicts both in and out of prison; and the prevention of crime. (2) The science of criminology has two basic objectives: to determine the causes, whether personal or social, of criminal behaviour and to evolve valid principles for the social control ofcrime. In pursuing these objectives,
Базовый курс 33 criminology draws on the findings of biology, psychology, psychiatry, sociology, anthropology, and related fields. (3) Criminology originated in the late 18th century when various movements began to question the humanity and efficiency of using punishment for retribution rather than deterrence and reform. There arose as a consequence what is called the classical school of criminology, which aimed to mitigate legal penalties and humanize penal institutions. During the 19th century the positivist school attempted to extend scientific neutrality to the understanding of crime. Because they held that criminals were shaped by their environment, positivists emphasized case studies and rehabilitative measures. A later school, the ‘social defence’ movement, stressed the importance of balance between the rights of criminals and the rights of society. (4) Criminologists commonly use several research techniques. The collection and interpretation of statistics is generally the initial step in research. The case study, often used by psychologists, concentrates on an individual or a group. The typological method involves classifying offences, criminals, or criminal areas according to various criteria. Sociological research, which may involve many different techniques, is used in criminology to study groups, subcultures, and gangs as well as rates and kinds of crime within geographic areas. (5) Criminology has many practical applications. Its findings can give lawyers, judges, and prison officials a better understanding of criminals, which may lead to more effective treatment. Criminological research can be used by legislators and in the reform of laws and of penal institutions. TASK 2. Find in the text the English equivalents for the following: 1. криминология рассматривает природу и причины преступ- лений 2. изучение обстоятельств правонарушения по материалам дела 3. криминология опирается на открытия других наук 4. проблемы задержания преступников 5. проблемы предотвращения преступлений 6. применение на практике 7. исправительные учреждения 8. установить причины преступности 9. выработать действующие принципы 10. смягчить наказание 11. подвергнуть сомнению
34 The Best of Just English TASK 3. Replace the words and expressions in bold type with the words and expressions that mean the same: • The objectives of criminology and criminalistics are rather different. • The system of penal institutions is to be reformed. • The scientific study of criminals originated in the late 18th century. • Modem criminologists hold that criminals are shaped by a multiplicity of factors. • Criminology studies the factors that lead to violent behaviour. TASK 4. Match the legal terms on the left with their definitions on the right. Use them in sentences of your own: 1) deterrence a) guidance and instruction given to offenders, their beneficial treatment aimed at restitution of positive skills and attitudes 2) case study b) measures taken to prevent hostile action 3) legislator c) a person serving a prison sentence 4) retribution d) a detailed analysis of a criminal person or group 5) convict e) a member of a body which gives or makes laws 6) rehabilitation f) something given or demanded in repayment, especially punishment TASK 5. Answer the following questions: 1. What steps can society take to cope with crime? 2. What trends can be observed in the development of criminology? 3. What methods and techniques are applied in criminology? 4. In what other spheres of life can criminology find useful application? TASK 6. Read the text and write down Russian equivalents for the words and expressions in bold type: Cesare Lombroso (1836-1909) Professor Lombroso is a criminologist whose views, though not altogether correct, caused a lot of interest and made other people look into
Базовый курс 35 the problem of crime in a more scientific way. He is regarded as the father of the scientific study of criminals, or criminology. Lombroso studied at the universities of Padua, Vienna, and Paris, and later he became a professor of psychiatry and forensic medicine, a director of a mental asylum. In an enormous book called The Criminal, he set out the idea that there is a definite criminal type, who can be recognized by his or her appearance. Some of what he said is difficult to believe. For example, he said that left-handed persons have a criminal instinct. Among the things he considered important were the shape of the head, colour of the hair, the eyes, the curve of the chin and forehead and if the ears stick out. Lombroso’s theories were widely influential in Europe for a time, but his emphasis on hereditary causes of crime was later strongly rejected in favour of environmental factors. Lombroso tried to reform the Italian penal system, and he encouraged more humane and constructive treatment of convicts through the use of work programs intended to make them more productive members of society. TASK 7. Complete the following text with the words from the box. Translate the text: criminal types; capital punishment; inmates; case studies; upbringing; investigations; suspended; multiple; unthinkable; rehabilitative Cesare Lombroso, professor of psychiatry and anthropology at the University of Turin, sought through firsthand observation and measurement
36 The Best of Just English of prison________to determine the characteristics of_____. Some of his___________allowed him to establish the existence of ‘hereditary criminals’. Lombroso held that such criminals exhibit a higher percentage of physical and mental anomalies than do noncriminals. Among these anomalies, were various unusual skull sizes and asymmetries of the facial bones. Other scholars helped to introduce the ideas that crime has_ causes and that most criminals are not bom criminal but are shaped by their____________and associations. Thus, the emphasis in criminology had turned to experimental__________________and to preventive and ___________measures. Without this contribution into the scientific study of criminals the present-day alternatives to________________and old-fashioned imprisonment such as probation,sentence, fines, and parole would have been. TASK 8. Answer the following questions: 1. What is Cesare Lombroso famous for? 2. How did he try to relate criminal behaviour to a person’s appearance? 3. What was Lombroso’s contribution to the development of penal system? TASK 9. Render the following article into English paying special attention to the words and expressions in bold type: ПРЕСТУПНИКАМИ РОЖДАЮТСЯ ИЛИ СТАНОВЯТСЯ? Более ста лет назад итальянский врач Че- заре Ломброзо создал галерею “преступ- ных типов”, чем обессмертил свое имя. Он, например, утверждал, что покатый лоб, квадратный подбородок, грубые чер- ты лица, длинные руки и мускулистое те- лосложение говорят о врожденных пре- ступных наклонностях. Понадобилось много лет для того, что- бы этатеория прирожденного преступ- ника потеряла свое влияние. Тем не ме- нее, и в наши дни продолжаются споры о наследовании преступных качеств и о биологических предпосылках преступ- ного поведения. Послевоенный экономический рост поро- дил у западных лидеров заблуждение, что с любыми общественными проблемами можно справиться, проводя соответст- вующую социальную политику и уве- личивая бюджетные отчисления. Тог- да казалось, что, давая человеку больше благ, можно смягчить и даже изменить его природу. Времена изменились, и ста-
Базовый курс 37 ло ясно, что ни либеральные реформы, ни коммунистический диктат не приве- ли к обществу процветания. В 1979 году Центр изучения близнецов и усыновленных детей в США начал на- блюдение за близнецами. Все они были разлучены вскоре после рождения и вос- питывались в разных концах Англии и Америки. Ученые исходили из предполо- жения, что, если близнецы однояйцевые, все различия, возникшие впоследст- вии, следует отнести за счет разной сре- ды обитания. Однако, исследования показали, что различия между детьми, воспитанными раздельно, и близнеца- ми, которые росли в одной семье, прак- тически отсутствуют. Другое исследование, проведенное в Да- нии, показало, что дети преступников, даже если их воспитывать в домах доб- ропорядочных граждан, в большей сте- пенисклонны к конфликтам с законом, чем их собственные отпрыски. Более то- го, есть все основания считать, что, если один из разлученных однояйцевых близ- нецов имеет судимость за уголовное преступление, второй рано или поздно тоже свернет на скользкую дорожку. Некоторые исследователи идут еще даль- ше и считают, что первопричина мно- гих видов правонарушения, в первую очередь таких тяжких, как убийства, разбойные нападения, изнасилования и поджоги — не социальная, а биоло- гическая. Самый серьезный удар по “теории о сре- де” нанесла сравнительно молодая нау- ка—-социобиология. Исследования, про- водимые на животных, показали, что у аг- рессивных обезьян уровень одного из гормонов — серотонина — ниже, чем у пассивных. Это, вполне возможно, отно- сится и к человеку: у людей, совершив- ших преднамеренные насильственные преступления, тоже наблюдается недо- статок этого гормона. Так кто же виноват: среда или генетика?
38 The Best of Just English DEBATE Criminality — Inborn or Acquired? Divide into two groups —pro and con, and condiicta debate on the origins of criminality. . Appoint the ‘Chair ’ ofthe debate who will give th£floor to the speakers of both teams. Use the active vocabulary from the Unit, , UNIT 2 CRIMES AND CRIMINALS BRAINSTORM CRIME is an act or the commission of an act that isforbidden or the omission of a duty that is commanded by a public law and that makes the offender liable to punishment by that law. Criminology deals with crimes and criminals; Name as many crimes as you can remember. Work in teams and compare your lists with those of other teams. < . Law Breakers TASK 1. Match each word on the left with the appropriate definition on the right: 1) an arsonist 2) a shop-lifter 3) a mugger 4) an offender 5) a vandal a) attacks and robs people, often in the street b) sets fire to property illegally c) is anyone who breaks the law d) breaks into houses or other buildings to steal e) steals from shops while acting as an ordinary customer 6) a burglar f) kills someone
Базовый курс 39 7) a murderer g) deliberately causes damage to property 8) a kidnapper h) steals things from people’s pockets in crowded places 9) a pickpocket i) gets secret information from another country 10) an accomplice j) buys and sells drugs illegally 11) a drug dealer k) takes away people by force and demands money for their return 12) a spy 1) helps a criminal in a criminal act 13) a terrorist m) uses violence for political reasons 14) an assassin n) causes damage or disturbance in public places 15) a hooligan o) hides on a ship or plane to get a free journey 16) a stowaway p) takes control of a plane by force and makes the pilot change course 17) a thief q) murders for political reasons or a reward 18) a hijacker r) is someone who steals 19) a forger s) makes counterfeit (false) money or signatures 20) a robber t) is a member of a criminal group 21) a smuggler u) steals money, etc. by force from people or places 22) a traitor v) marries illegally, being married already 23) a gangster w) is a soldier who runs away from the army 24) a deserter x) brings goods into a country illegally without paying tax 25) a bigamist y) illegally carries drugs into another country 26) drug smuggler z) betrays his or her country to another state
40 The Best of Just English TASK 2. Continue the following table with the words from Task 1 where possible. The first few are done for you. Consult the dictionary when necessary: Crime Criminal Criminal Act treason traitor to betray theft thief to steal murder murderer to murder Just for Fun Thieves respect property; they merely wish the property to become their property that they may more perfectly respect it. G.K.Chesterton ---------------------------------------------------------------, ROLE-PLAY Let’s Do Justice! Work in pairs. Each pair should consist of a ‘criminal ’ (choose your role from the list above) and a ‘defence lawyer ’. STEP 1. The lawyer questions his client (the criminal) andfinds out all the circumstances of the crime. STEP 2. The lawyer delivers a speech trying to establish his client’s innocence. STEP 3. The rest of the group — the jurors — deliberate on the evidence and bring in a verdict. UNIT 3 THE CAUSES OF CRIME TASK I. Match the following headings with the sections of the text below: • Psychological and psychiatric theories
Базовый курс 41 • Biological theories • Multiple causation theory • Social environment theories • Theological and ethical theories • Climatic theory (1) No one knows why crime occurs. The oldest theory, based on theology and ethics, is that criminals are perverse persons who deliberately commit crimes or who do so at the instigation of the devil or other evil spirits. Although this idea has been discarded by modem criminologists, it persists among uninformed people and provides the rationale for the harsh punishments still meted out to criminals in many parts of the world. (2) Since the 18th century, various scientific theories have been advanced to explain crime. One of the first efforts to explain crime on scientific, rather than theological, grounds was made at the end of the 18th century by the German physician and anatomist Franz Joseph Gall, who tried to establish relationships between skull structure and criminal proclivities. This theory, popular during the 19th century, is now discredited and has been abandoned. A more sophisticated theory — a biological one — was developed late in the 19th century by the Italian criminologist Cesare Lombroso, who asserted that crimes were committed by persons who are born with certain recognizable hereditary physical traits. Lombroso’s theory was disproved early in the 20th century by the British criminologist Charles Goring. Goring’s comparative study of jailed criminals and law-abiding persons established that so-called criminal types, with innate dispositions to crime, do not exist. Recent scientific studies have tended to confirm Goring’s findings. Some investigators still hold, however, that specific abnormalities of the brain and of the endocrine system contribute to a person’s inclination toward criminal activity. (3) Another approach to an explanation of crime was initiated by the French political philosopher Montesquieu, who attempted to relate criminal behavior to natural, or physical environment. His successors have gathered evidence tending to show that crimes against person, such as homicide, are relatively more numerous in warm climates, whereas
42 The Best of Just English crimes against property, such as theft, are more frequent in colder regions. Other studies seem to indicate that the incidence of crime declines in direct ratio to drops in barometric pressure, to increased humidity, and to higher temperature. (4) Many prominent criminologists of the 19th century, particularly those associated with the Socialist movement, attributed crime mainly to the influence of poverty. They pointed out that persons who are unable to provide adequately for themselves and their families through normal legal channels are frequently driven to theft, burglary, prostitution, and other offences. The incidence of crime especially tends to rise in times of widespread unemployment. Present-day criminologists take a broader and deeper view; they place the blame formost crimes on the whole range of environmental conditions associated with poverty. The living conditions of the poor, particularly of those in slums, are characterized by overcrowding, lack of privacy, inadequate play space and recreational facilities, and poor sanitation. Such conditions engender feelings of deprivation and hopelessness and are conducive to crime as a means of escape. The feeling is encouraged by the example set by those who have escaped to what appears to be the better way of life made possible by crime. Some theorists relate the incidence of crime to the general state of a culture, especially the impact of economic crises, wars, and revolutions and the general sense of insecurity and uprootedness to which these forces give rise. As a society becomes more unsettled and its people more restless and fearful of the future, the crime rate tends to rise. This is particularly true of juvenile crime, as the experience of the United States since World War II has made evident. (5) The final major group of theories are psychological and psychiatric. Studies by such 20th century investigators as the American criminologist Bernard Glueck and the British psychiatrist William Healy indicated that about one-fourth of a typical convict population is psychotic, neurotic, or emotionally unstable and another one-fourth is mentally deficient. These emotional and mental conditions do not automatically make people criminals, but do, it is believed,
Базовый курс 43 make them more prone to criminality. Recent studies of criminals have thrown further light on the kinds of emotional disturbances that may lead to criminal behavior. (6) Since the mid-20th century, the notion that crime can be explained by any single theory has fallen into disfavour among investigators. Instead, experts incline to so-called multiple factor, ormultiple causation theories. They reason that crime springs from a multiplicity of conflicting and converging influences — biological, psychological, cultural, economic and political. The multiple causation explanations seem more credible than the earlier, simpler theories. An understanding of the causes of crime is still elusive, however, because the interrelationship of causes is difficult to determine. TASK 2. Write down Russian equivalents for the words and expressions in bold type, given in the text above. TASK 3. Find in the texts above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions and reproduce the context in which they were used: 1. кража 2. убийство 3. кража co взломом 4. сравнительный анализ преступников и законопослушных граж- дан 5. соотнести преступное поведение с факторами окружающей среды 6. преступления против человека 7. преступления против собственности 8. совершать преступления умышленно 9. некоторые узнаваемые наследуемые черты 10. выдающиеся ученые-криминологи 11. ряд условий 12. уровень преступности 13. быть склонным к преступной деятельности 14. пролить свет на проблему 15. теория многообразия факторов 16. достоверная теория TASK 4. Answer the following questions: 1. What ideas were the earliest criminological theories based on?
44 The Best of Just English 2. How did the biological theory develop? 3. What was Montesquieu’s approach to causes of crime? 4. What views on crime predominated in the 19th century? 5. How did criminological theories develop in the 20th century? 6. What is the relationship between the mental and emotional state of a person and his or her inclinations to crime? 7. What are the latest views on the causes of crime? TASK5. Render the following passage into English paying special attention to the words and expressions in bold type: Преступность и ее причины Преступность и ее причины могут быть изучены на индивиду- альном, групповом и социальном уровнях. Следовательно, им могут быть даны психологическое, социологическое и философское объ- яснения. Эти объяснения не противоречат друг другу, а дополняют одно другое, позволяя проанализировать причины преступности с различных сторон. Рассматривая эту проблему на индивидуальном уровне, мож- но обозначить причины преступности как конфликт поведения че- ловека с социальной средой. Когда человек оказывается в сложной ситуации, он часто не находит решения возникших проблем ивыбирает преступный путь. Но возникает естественный вопрос: а почему личность форми- руется таким образом? И почему возникают проблемные ситуации, ставящие человека перед трудным выбором? Ответить на эти вопро- сы невозможно, если не обратиться к изучению современного об- щества. При этом очевидно, что в качестве причин преступности выступают и социально-экономические, и политические, и духовные факторы, тесно связанные друг с другом. Обстоятельствами, ведущими к преступному поведению, счи- таются антиобщественное поведение родителей; алкоголизм, нерв- но-психические заболевания родителей; низкий уровень культу- ры в семье. Негативными особенностями личности и поведения считаются: прежняя судимость; совершение противоправных поступков; нега- тивное отношение к нравственным ценностям; жестокость и мсти- тельность; пьянство, употребление наркотиков, азартные игры. Итак, нетрудно заключить, что преступность возникает на осно- ве взаимодействия личности и социальной среды.
Базовый курс 45 DEBATE All criminals are perverse people! Prepare your arguments for or against the statement above. Use the active vocabulary from the Unit. Divide into two groups — pro and con, and conduct a debate. Appoint the ‘Chair ’ of the debate who will give the floor to the speakers of both teams. UNIT 4 PUNISHMENT BRAINSTORM, In your opinion, what does ‘punishment' mean? What kinds of punishment do you know? TASK 1. Read the text and write down Russian equivalents for the words in bold Punishment describes the imposition by some authority of a deprivation — usually painful — on a person who has violated a law, a rule, or other norm. When the violation is of the criminal law of society there is a formal process of accusation and proof followed by imposition of a sentence by a designated official, usually a judge. Informally, any organized group — most typically the family, may punish perceived wrongdoers. Because punishment is both painful and guilt producing, its application calls for a justification. In Western culture, four basic justifications have been given: retribution, deterrence, rehabilitation, and incapacitation. Most penal historians note a gradual trend over the last centuries toward morelenient sentences in Western countries. Capital and corporal
46 The Best of Just English punishment, widespread in the early 19th century, are seldom invoked by contemporary society. Indeed, in the United States corporal punishment as such appears to be contrary to the 8th Amendment’s restrictions on cruel and unusual punishment. Yet the rate of imprisonment in the United States appears to be growing. Furthermore, since the middle of the 20th century, popular and professional sentiment has taken a distinctly punitive turn and now tends to see retribution and incapacitation — rather than rehabilitation — as the goals of criminal punishment. Criminal sentences ordinarily embrace four basic modes of punishment. In descending order of severity these are: incarceration, community supervision, fine, and restitution. The death penalty is now possible only for certain types of atrocious murders and treason. Punishment is an ancient practice whose presence in modem cultures may appear to be out of place because it purposefully inflicts pain. In the minds of most people, however, it continues to find justification. TASK 2. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions: • authority, authorities • community supervision • deterrence • fine • incapacitation • incarceration • justification • rehabilitation • restitution • retribution • sentence • deprivation TASK 3. The word PUNITIVE has the following meanings in Russian: 1) связанный с применением наказания punitive article — статья, устанавливающая уголовную санкцию 2) карательный; штрафной punitive action — карательная мера, карательная акция Match the following English expressions with their Russian equivalents: 1) punitive sentencing 2) punitive institution 3) punitive justice 4) punitive law 5) punitive legislation а) карательная мера b) карательное воздействие с) карательное правосудие d) карательное учреждение е) лишение свободы как кара за совершённое преступление 6) punitive measure 7) punitive treatment f) уголовное законодательство g) уголовный закон
Базовый курс 47 TASK 4. Point out the main ideas of the text in Task 1. Make a list of them. TASK 5. Work in teams and write down false statements based on the text in Task I (no fewer than 6 statements). Present them in class. Use the information from the text to refute the other team’s false statements. TASK 6. Complete the following text with the words and expressions from the box: From the History of Punishment victim; felons; offender; beheading; adultery; pillory; punishment; execution; deliberately; condemned; ancient; medieval; guilty; legal; public For the most history ______________has been both painful and in order to act as deterrent to others. Physical punishments and public humiliations were social events and carried out in most accessible parts of towns, often on market days when the greater part of the population were present. Justice had to be seen to be done. One of the most bizarre methods of_____________was inflicted in ancient Rome on people found of murdering their fathers. Their punishment was to be put in a sack with a rooster, a viper, and a dog, and then drowned along with the three animals. In_________Greece the custom of allowing a man to end his own life by poison was extended only to full citizens. The philosopher Socrates died in this way. Condemned slaves were beaten to death instead. Stoning was the ancient method of punishment for_______________among other crimes. In Turkey if a butcher was found guilty of selling bad meat, he was tied to a post with a piece of stinking meat fixed under his nose, or a baker having sold short weight bread could be nailed to his door by his ear. 3 — 9099
48 The Best of Just English One of the most common punishments for petty offences was the , which stood in the main square of towns. The was locked by hands and head into the device and made to stand sometimes for days, while crowds jeered and pelted the offender with rotten vegetables or worse. In_________Europe some methods of execution were_________drawn out to inflict maximum suffering._____were tied to a heavy wheel and rolled around the streets until they were crushed to death. Others were strangled, very slowly. One of the most terrible punishments was hanging and quartering. The__________was hanged, beheaded and the body cut into four pieces. It remained a_______method of punishment in Britain until 1814.was normally reserved for those of high rank. In England ‘block and axe’ was the common method but this was different from France and Germany where the victim kneeled and the head was taken off with a swing of the sword. TASK 7. Answer the following questions: 1. Why did ancient punishment have to be painful? 2. What was the purpose of making punishments public? 3. What was the symbolic meaning of the punishment inflicted on the parent’s murderers? 4. What punishments were most common in the East? 5. How did punishments reflect social status? It’s Interesting to Know Joseph Ignace Guillotin A doctor and member of the French Legislative Assembly, he suggested the use of the guillotine for executions in 1789. A physician and humanitarian, Guillotin was disturbed by vulgarity of public executions and petitioned for a single method of capital punishment to be used for all crimes demanding the death sentence. The guillotine consists of a heavy blade with a diagonal edge, which falls between two upright posts to cut off the victim’s head cleanly and quickly. Similar machines had been used in various other countries including Scotland and Italy. The main idea was to make execution as quick and painless as possible. The first person executed by guillotine was the highwayman Pelletier in 1792, but the machine came into its own
Базовый курс 49 in 1793, during the Reign of Terror following the French Revolution, when aristocrats were guillotined by the hundred. The device was nicknamed ’’Madame Guillotine” after its sponsor. Charles Lynch Captain Charles Lynch, of Virginia, author of the infamous lynch law, will forever be linked with ‘vigilante justice’. Lynch decided that he and his neighbours were too far from lawmakers and sheriffs to punish properly the vandals and robbers terrorizing the rural area. He encouraged the fellow citizens to sign a declaration he drafted, announcing the intention to ‘take matters in their own hands’. “If they (criminals) do not desist from their evil practices, we will inflict such corporal punishment on him or them, as to us shall seem adequate to the crime committed or the damage sustained”. Although the death penalty was not always exacted, in most cases the punishment turned out to be hanging. In addition to the fact that many innocent victims suffered lynching, a certain amount of guilt among the lynchers can be ascertained by the very technique for hanging criminals. Lynch and his cohorts practiced a form of passive hanging. A rope was tied around a tree and the condemned man placed on a horse with the other side of the rope strung snugly around his neck. So the criminal was killed not by the captors tightening the noose, but the whim of the horse. When the horse moved far enough away from the tree, the rope choked the horseman. UNIT 5 THE PURPOSE OF STATE PUNISHMENT BRAINSTORM How do you understand the purpose of state punishment? In your opinion, how should state punishment be administered? 3*
50 The Best of Just English TASK 1. Explain the meaning of the words and expressions from the box. Complete the following text using these words and expressions: wrongdoer; misdeeds; deterrent; retribution; death penalty; corporal punishment; rehabilitate; reform; barbaric; law-abiding; humane; crime doesn’t pay What is the purpose of punishment? One purpose is obviously to the offender, to correct the offender’s moral attitudes and anti- social behaviour and to him or her, which means to assist the offender to return to normal life as a useful member of the community. Punishment can also be seen as a because it warns other people of what will happen if they are tempted to break the law and prevents them from doing so. However, the third purpose of punishment lies, perhaps, in society’s desire for_____, which basically means revenge. In other words, don’t we feel that a should suffer for his? The form of punishment should also be considered. On the one hand, some believe that we should ‘make the punishment fit the crime’. Those who steal from others should be deprived of their own property to ensure that criminals are left in no doubt that______________. For those who attack others should be used. Murderers should be subject to the principle ‘an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth’ and automatically receive the. On the other hand, it is said that such views are unreasonable, cruel and________and that we should show a more___attitude to punishment and try to understand why a person commits a crime and how society has failed to enable him to live a respectable,life. TASK 2. Name the main purposes of state punishment as mentioned in the text. Learn the text by heart.
Базовый курс 51 UN I Т 6 TREATMENT OF CRIMINALS TASK 1. Match the following headings with the sections of the text below: • Rehabilitative programs • Psychiatric and case-study methods • Bentham approach • Neoclassical school • Preventive approach (1) Various correctional approaches developed in the wake of causation theories. The old theological and moralistic theories encouraged punishment as retribution by society for evil. This attitude, indeed, still exists. The 19th-century British jurist and philosopher Jeremy Bentham tried to make the punishment more precisely fit the crime. Bentham believed that pleasure could be measured against pain in all areas of human choice and conduct and that human happiness could be attained through such hedonic calculus. He argued that criminals would be deterred from crime if they knew, specifically, the suffering they would experience if caught. Bentham therefore urged definite, inflexible penalties for each class of crime; the pain of the penalty would outweigh only slightly the pleasure of success in crime; it would exceed it sufficiently to act as a deterrent, but not so much as to amount to wanton cruelty. This so-called calculus of pleasures and pains was based on psychological postulates no longer accepted. (2) The Bentham approach was in part superseded in the late 19th and early 20th centuries by a movement known as the neoclassical school. This school, rejecting fixed punishments, proposed that sentences vary with the particular circumstances of a crime, such as the age, intellectual level, and emotional state of the offender; the motives and other conditions that may have incited to crime; and the offender’s past
52 The Best of Just English record and chances of rehabilitation. The influence of the neoclassical school led to the development of such concepts as grades of crime and punishment, indeterminate sentences, and the limited responsibility of young or mentally deficient offenders. (3) At about the same time, the so-called Italian school stressed measures for preventing crime rather than punishing it. Members of this school argued that individuals are shaped by forces beyond their control and therefore cannot be held fully responsible for their crimes. They urged birth control, censorship of pornographic literature, and other actions designed to mitigate the influences contributing to crime. The Italian school has had a lasting influence on the thinking of present-day criminologists. (4) The modem approach to the treatment of criminals owes most to psychiatric and case-study methods. Much continues to be learned from offenders who have been placed on probation or parole and whose behavior, both in and out of prison, has been studied intensively. The contemporary scientific attitude is that criminals are individual personalities and that their rehabilitation can be brought about only through individual treatment. Increased juvenile crime has aroused public concern and has stimulated study of the emotional disturbances that foster delinquency. This growing understanding of delinquency has contributed to the understanding of criminals of all ages. (5) During recent years, crime has been under attack from many directions. The treatment and rehabilitation of criminals has improved in many areas. The emotional problems of convicts have been studied and efforts have been made to help such offenders. Much, however, remains to be done. Parole boards have engaged persons trained in psychology and social work to help convicts on parole or probation adjust to society. Various U.S. states have agencies with programs of reform and rehabilitation for both adult and juvenile offenders. Many communities have initiated concerted attacks on the conditions that breed crime. Criminologists recognize that both adult and juvenile crime stem chiefly from the breakdown of traditional social norms and controls, resulting from industrialization, urbanization, increasing physical and social mobility, and the effects of economic crises and wars. Most criminologists believe that effective crime prevention requires community agencies and programs to provide the guidance and control performed, ideally and traditionally, by the family and by the force of social custom. Although the crime rate has not drastically diminished as a result of these efforts, it is hoped that the extension and improvement of all valid approaches to prevention of crime eventually will reduce its incidence.
Базовый курс 53 TASK 2. Write down the translation of the sentences from the text above given in bold type. TASK 3. Find in the text the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. бессмысленная жестокость 2. досрочное освобождение 3. общественные организации 4. ограниченная ответственность 5. освобождение на поруки 6. порождать преступление 7. преступления, совершенные несовершеннолетними 8. привлекать внимание общественности 9. совет по условно-досрочному освобождению 10. упадок традиционных общественных норм DISCUSSION Using the information andfacts from the Unit discuss the following: • Greater public understanding of the crime problem is important for the apprehension and conviction of criminals, their rehabilitation, and the prevention of crime. • Awareness by the criminal of a high probability of arrest is the most effective deterrent to crime. • The emotional problems of convicts should be given special consideration. • Crime stems from the breakdown of traditional social norms. • Family and social control are the most effective means of crime prevention. • In recent years public has demanded longer and hasher sentences for offenders. TASK 4. Give Russian equivalents for the following general types ofpunishment. Put them in descending order of severity. • Capital punishment • Community service • Disciplinary training in a detention centre • Fixed penalty fine
54 The Best of Just English • Life imprisonment • Probation • Short-term imprisonment • Suspended sentence • Long-term imprisonment TASK 5. Study the following list of offences. Rate them on a scale from 1 to 10 (I is a minor offence, 10 is a very serious crime). They are in no particular order. You don’t have to apply your knowledge of existing laws —your own opinion is necessary: □ driving in excess of the speed limit □ common assault (e.g. a fight in a disco-club) □ drinking and driving □ malicious wounding (e.g. stabbing someone in a fight) □ murdering a policeman during a robbery □ murdering a child □ causing death by dangerous driving □ smoking marijuana □ selling drugs (such as heroin) □ stealing £1,000 from a bank by fraud □ stealing £1,000 worth of goods from someone’s home □ rape □ grievous bodily harm (almost killing someone) □ shop-lifting □ stealing £1,000 from a bank by threatening someone with a gun □ possession of a gun without a licence TASK 6. Which of the sentences listed in Task 4 fit the offences in Task 5? Give your reasons. TASK 7. Study the authentic cases given below. Discuss each case in class and decide the following: 1. Was justice done? 2. If you were the judge, what other facts and circumstances would you like to know? 3. If you were the judge, would you give a different sentence? 4. Would you choose a lighter sentence, or a more severe one? 5. How would you have felt if you had been the victim of the crime? 6. How would you have felt if you had been the defendant?
Базовый курс 55 Manslaughter In 1981 Marianne Bachmeir, from Lubeck, West Germany, was in court watching the trial of Klaus Grabowski, who had murdered her 7 year- old daughter. Grabowski had a history of attacking children. During the trial, Frau Bachmeir pulled a Beretta 22 pistol from her handbag and fired eight bullets, six of which hit Grabowski, killing him. The defence said she had bought the pistol with the intention of committing suicide, but when she saw Grabowski in court she drew the pistol and pulled the trigger. She was found not guilty of murder, but was given six years imprisonment for manslaughter. West German newspapers reflected the opinion of millions of Germans that she should have been freed, calling her ‘the avenging mother’. Crime of Passion Bernard Lewis, a thirty-six-old man, while preparing dinner became involved in an argument with his drunken wife. In a fit of a rage Lewis, using the kitchen knife with which he had been preparing the meal, stabbed and killed his wife. He immediately called for assistance, and readily confessed when the first patrolman appeared on the scene with the ambulance attendant. He pleaded guilty to manslaughter. The probation department’s investigation indicated that Lewis was a rigid individual who never drank, worked regularly, and had no previous criminal record. His thirty-year-old deceased wife, and mother of three children, was a ‘fine girl’ when sober but was frequently drunk and on a number of occasions when intoxicated had left their small children unattended. After due consideration of the background of the offence and especially of the plight of the three motherless youngsters, the judge placed Lewis on probation so that he could work, support and take care of the children. On probation Lewis adjusted well, worked regularly, appeared to be devoted to the children, and a few years later was discharged as ‘improved’ from probation. Murder In 1952 two youths in Mitcham, London, decided to rob a dairy. They were Christopher Craig, aged 16, and Derek William Bentley, 19. During the robbery they were disturbed by Sydney Miles, a policeman. Craig produced a gun and killed the policeman. At that time Britain still had the death penalty for certain types of murder, including murder during a robbery. Because Craig was under 18, he was sentenced to life imprisonment. Bently
56 The Best of Just English who had never touched the gun, was over 18. He was hanged in 1953. The case was quoted by opponents of capital punishment, which was abolished in 1965. Assault In 1976 a drunk walked into a supermarket. When the manager asked him to leave, the drunk assaulted him, knocking out a tooth. A policeman who arrived and tried to stop the fight had his jaw broken. The drunk was fined 10 pounds. Shop-lifting In June 1980 Lady Isabel Barnett, a well-known TV personality was convicted of stealing a tin of tuna fish and a carton of cream, total value 87p, from a small shop. The case was given enormous publicity. She was fined 75 pounds and had to pay 200 pounds towards the cost of the case. A few days later she killed herself. Fraud This is an example of a civil case rather than a criminal one. A man had taken out an insurance policy of 100,000 pounds on his life. The policy was due to expire at 3 o’clock on a certain day. The man was in serious financial difficulties, and at 2.30 on the expiry day he consulted his solicitor. He then went out and called a taxi. He asked the driver to make a note of the time, 2.50. He then shot himself. Suicide used not to cancel an insurance policy automatically. (It does nowadays.) The company refused to pay the man’s wife, and the courts supported them. DEBATE • An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. • Judge not least you be judged. • Everyone deserves a second chance. • Justice is nothing unless it is tempered with mercy. Prepare your arguments for or against the statements above. Use the active vocabulary from the Unit. Divide into two groups —pro and con, and conduct a debate. Appoint the ‘Chair ’ ofthe debate who will give thefloor to the speakers of both teams.
Базовый курс 57 UNIT 7 CAPITAL PUNISHMENT: HISTORY TASK 1. Match the following headings with the sections of the text below: • Effectiveness • History • Moral aspect (1) Capital punishment is a legal infliction of the death penalty; in modem law, corporal punishment in its most severe form. The usual alternative to the death penalty is long-term or life imprisonment. The earliest historical records contain evidence of capital punishment. It was mentioned in the Code of Hammurabi. The Bible prescribed death as the penalty for more than 30 different crimes, ranging from murder to fornication. The Draconian Code of ancient Greece imposed capital punishment for every offence. In England, during the reign of William the Conqueror, the death penalty was not used, although the results of interrogation and torture were often fatal. By the end of the 15th century, English law recognized six major crimes: treason, murder, larceny, burglary, rape, and arson. By 1800, more than 200 capital crimes were recognized; and as a result, 1000 or more persons were sentenced to death each year (although most sentences were commuted by royal pardon). In early American colonies the death penalty was commonly authorized for a wide variety of crimes. Blacks, whether slave or free, were threatened with death for many crimes that were punished less severely when committed by whites. Efforts to abolish the death penalty did not gather momentum until the end of the 18th century. In Europe, a short treatise, On Crimes and Punishments, by the Italian jurist Cesare Beccaria, inspired influential thinkers such as the French philosopher Voltaire to oppose torture, flogging, and the death penalty.
58 The Best of Just English The abolition of capital punishment in England in November 1965 was welcomed by most people with humane and progressive ideas. To them it seemed a departure from feudalism, from the cruel pre-Christian spirit of revenge: an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. Many of these people think differently now. Since the abolition of capital punishment crime — and especially murder—has been on increase throughout Britain. Today, therefore, public opinion in Britain has changed. People who before, also in Parliament, stated that capital punishment was not a deterrent to murder — for there have always been murders in all countries with or without the law of execution — now feel that killing the assassin is the lesser of two evils. Capital punishment, they think, may not be the ideal answer, but it is better than nothing, especially when, as in England, a sentence of life imprisonment only lasts eight or nine years. (2) The fundamental questions raised by the death penalty are whether it is an effective deterrent to violent crime, and whether it is more effective than the alternative of long-term imprisonment. DEFENDERS of the death penalty insist that because taking an offender’s life is a more severe punishment than any prison term, it must be the better deterrent. SUPPORTERS also argue that no adequate deterrent in life imprisonment is effective for those already serving a life term who commit murder while being in prison, and for revolutionaries, terrorists, traitors, and spies. In the U.S. those who argue against the death penalty as a deterrent to crime cite the following: (1) Adjacent states, in which one has the death penalty and the other does not, show no significant differences in the murder rate; (2) states that use the death penalty seem to have a higher number of homicides than states that do not use it; (3) states that abolish and then reintroduce the death penalty do not seem to show any significant change in the murder rate; (4) no change in the rate of homicides in a given city or state seems to occur following an expository execution. In the early 1970s, some published reports showed that each execution in the U.S. deterred eight or more homicides, but subsequent research has discredited this finding. The current prevailing view among criminologists is that no conclusive
Базовый курс 59 evidence exists to show that the death penalty is a more effective deterrent to violent crime than long-term imprisonment. (3) The classic moral arguments in favor of the death penalty have been biblical and call for retribution. “Whosoever sheds man’s blood, by man shall his blood be shed” has usually been interpreted as a divine warrant for putting the murderer to death. “Let the punishment fit the crime” is its secular counterpart; both statements imply that the murderer deserves to die. DEFENDERS of capital punishment have also claimed that society has the right to kill in defence of its members, just as the individual may kill in self-defence. The analogy to self-defence, however, is somewhat doubtful, as long as the effectiveness of the death penalty as a deterrent to violent crimes has not been proved. The chief objection to capital punishment has been that it is always used unfairly, in at least three major ways. First, women are rarely sentenced to death and executed, even though 20 per cent of all homicides in recent years have been committed by women. Second, a disproportionate number of non-whites are sentenced to death and executed. Third, poor and friendless defendants, those with inexperienced or court-appointed attorney, are most likely to be sentenced to death and executed. DEFENDERS of the death penalty, however, have insisted that, because none of the laws of capital punishment causes sexist, racist, or class bias in its use, these kinds of discrimination are not a sufficient reason for abolishing the death penalty. OPPONENTS have replied that the death penalty can be the result of a mistake in practice and that it is impossible to administer fairly. TASK 2. Find in the text the English equivalents for the following words and expressions related to punishment: 1. возмездие 2. долгосрочное тюремное заключение 3. допрос 4. отбывать срок в тюрьме 5. отмена смертной казни 6. пожизненное тюремное заключение 7. показательная казнь 8. приговаривать к смерти 9. пытка 10. смягчать приговор 11. телесные наказания
60 The Best of Just English TASK 3. Translate the following passage into English paying special attention to the words in bold type: На протяжении веков смертная казнь назначалась за самые разные виды преступлений. В средние века человека могли казнить за хищение имущества, изнасилование и даже поджог. Государ- ственная измена была и остается во многих странах преступлени- ем, наказуемым смертной казнью. Существует мнение, что даже долгосрочное или пожизненное тюремное заключение является бессмысленным наказанием для так называемых “идеологических” преступников: предателей, шпионов, террористов. Смертная казнь для такого рода преступников — меньшее из двух зол. TASK 4. Answer the following questions: 1. Why was capital punishment imposed so frequently in ancient societies? 2. Why were blacks punished more severely than whites in early American colonies? 3. When did European thinkers begin considering the alternatives to death penalty? 4. How have the attitudes towards capital punishment changed in Britain since the abolition of death penalty in 1965? 5. Is imprisonment effective for revolutionaries and terrorists? Why? 6. How have Americans treated the problem of death penalty? 7. What factors may hamper the fair administration of justice in capital cases? TASK 5. Continue the table below with the following words and expressions describing polar views. The first few are done for you FOR AGAINST proponent to argue in favour of smth. opponent to argue against smth. • con • objection to smth. • defender • pro • supporter • to accept smth. • to admit smth.
Базовый курс 61 • to agree to/with smth. • to confirm smth. • to consent to smth. • to contradict to smth. • to deny smth. • to disagree with smth. • to object to smth. • to oppose smth. • to reject smth. TASK 6. What is your personal understanding of the following famous statements? Make a list of examples from history to illustrate these statements. Use the words and expressions from Task 5 to support the following opposite points of view: FOR AGAINST 1. “An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth!” — We should admit this Biblical principle. It is eternal!.... 1. “An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth!” — This is a cruel pre-Christian spirit of revenge. We are civilized now — let’s give it up and be humane!.... 2. “Let the punishment fit the crime.” — Those who steal should be deprived of their property, .... those who kill should be deprived of their own lives!.... 2. “Let the punishment fit the crime.” — We can not accept fixed punishments for crimes. Circumstances should be taken into account. 3. “The pain of the penalty should outweigh only slightly the pleasure of success in crime.” J. Bentham 3. 4. 4. “It is much more prudent to acquit two persons, though actually guilty, than to pass sentence of condemnation on one that is virtuous and innocent.” Voltaire 5. “The primary purpose of the punishment which society inflicts is to redress the disorder caused by the offence.” Pope John Paul II 5. 6. 7. “Whosoever sheds man’s blood, by man shall his blood be shed.” 6. “An evil deed is not redeemed by an evil deed of retaliation.” C.S.King 7.
62 The Best of Just English DISCUSSION Describe the current attitudes to the following problems using the expressions from Task 5. Make up no fewer than 5 sentences. • International terrorism • Environment • Artificial intelligence • Drugs • Political correctness Just for Fun Murder is always a mistake... One should never do anything that one cannot talk about after dinner. Oscar Wilde ♦ ♦ * A man sentenced to death was being taken to the execution place in very nasty weather. “What lousy weather”, he remarked. “You are not the one to grumble”, commented one of the escort. “We’ve got yet to go back”. UNIT 8 CAPITAL PUNISHMENT: FOR AND AGAINST Perhaps all criminals should be required to carry cards which read: “Fragile: Handle with Care”. It will never do, these days, to go around referring to criminals as violent thugs. You must refer to them politely as ‘social misfits’. The professional killer who wouldn’t think twice about using his cosh or crowbar to batter some harmless old lady to death in order to rob her of her meagre life-savings must never be given a dose of
Базовый курс 63 his own medicine. He is in need of ‘hospital treatment’. According to his misguided defenders, society is to blame. A wicked society breeds evil — or so the argument goes. When you listen to this kind of talk, it makes you wonder why we aren’t all criminals. We have done away with the absurdly harsh laws of the nineteenth century and this is only right. But surely enough is enough. The most senseless piece of criminal legislation in Britain and a number of other countries has been the suspension of capital punishment. The violent criminal has become a kind of hero-figure in our time. He is glorified on the screen; he is pursued by the press and paid vast sums of money for his ‘memoirs’. Newspapers which specialise in crime-reporting enjoy enormous circulations and the publishers of trashy cops and robbers stories or ‘murder mysteries’ have never had it so good. When you read about the achievements of the great train robbers, it makes you wonder whether you are reading about some glorious resistance movement. The hardened criminal is cuddled and cosseted by the sociologists on the one hand and adored as a hero by the masses on the other. It’s no wonder he is a privileged person who expects and receives VIP treatment wherever he goes. Capital punishment used to be a major deterrent. It made the violent robber think twice before pulling the trigger. It gave the cold-blooded poisoner something to ponder about while he was shaking up or serving his arsenic cocktail. It prevented unarmed policemen from being mowed down while pursuing their duty by killers armed with automatic weapons. Above all, it protected the most vulnerable members of society, young children, from brutal sex-maniacs. It is horrifying to think that the criminal can literally get away with murder. We all know that ‘life sentence’ does not mean what it says. After ten years or so of ‘good conduct’, the most desperate villain is free to return to society where he will live very comfortably, thank you, on the proceeds of his crime, or he will go on committing offences until he is caught again. People are always willing to hold liberal views at the expence of others. It’s always fashionable to pose as the defender of the under-dog, so long as you, personally, remain unaffected. Did the defenders of crime, one wonders, in their desire for
64 The Best of Just English fair-play, consult the victims before they suspended capital punishment? Hardly. You see, they couldn’t, because all the victims were dead. TASK 1. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions: • a brutal sex-maniac • a cold-blooded poisoner • a desperate villain • a hardened criminal • a professional killer • ‘a social misfit’ • a train robber • a violent criminal • a violent robber • a violent thug • to batter • to breed evil • to cosset • to cuddle • to deter criminals • to do away with • to get away with murder • to go on committing offences • to mow down • to pull the trigger • to rob • to think twice TASK 2. Study the following key phrases from the text above. Reproduce the text using these key phrases: 1. Criminals should carry cards: “Fragile: Handle with Care”. 2. We mustn’t refer to them as thugs, but as ‘social misfits’. 3. Killer who murders old lady for savings needs ‘hospital treatment’. 4. “Society is to blame” argument — why aren’t we all criminals? 5. We have done away with absurdly harsh laws: that’s enough. 6. Suspension of capital punishment: senseless. 7. Violent criminal: a hero figure. 8. Glorified on screen and by press. 9. Great demand for crime stories. 10. Train robbers: a glorious resistance movement? 11. Cuddled by sociologists, adored by masses, the criminal is a privileged person. 12. He expects and receives VIP treatment. 13. Capital punishment was once a major deterrent. 14. It protected unarmed policemen, young children. 15. Now the criminal can get away with murder. 16. ‘Life sentence’: ten years ‘good conduct’ and then freedom to live on the proceeds of crime. 17. People hold liberal views at the expence of others. 18. Were victims consulted before suspension of capital punishment? No: they were dead.
Базовый курс 65 TASK 3. Follow the statements given in Task 2. Provide counter-arguments to each statement. Compare your list with those of other students. TASK 4. Study the following facts and arguments: Financial Costs The death penalty is not now, nor has it ever been, a more economical alternative to life imprisonment. A murder trial normally takes much longer when the death penalty is at issue than when it is not. Litigation costs — including the time of judges, prosecutors, public defenders, and court reporters, and the high costs of briefs — are all borne by the taxpayer. Inevitability of Error In 1975, only a year before the Supreme Court affirmed the constitutionality of capital punishment, two African-American men in Florida were released from prison after twelve years awaiting execution for the murder of two white men. Their convictions were the result of coerced confessions, erroneous testimony of an alleged eyewitness, and incompetent defense counsel. Though a white man eventually admitted his guilt, a nine-year legal battle was required before the governor would grant them a pardon. Had their execution not been stayed while the constitutional status of the death penalty was argued in the courts, these two innocent men probably would not be alive today. Barbarity The latest mode of inflicting the death penalty, enacted into law by nearly two dozen American states, is lethal injection, first used in Texas in 1982. It is easy to overstate the humaneness and efficacy of this method. There is no way of knowing that it is really painless. As the U.S. Court of Appeals observed, there is “substantial and uncontroverted evidence ... that execution by lethal injection poses a serious risk of cruel, protracted death.... Even a slight error in dosage or administration can leave a prisoner conscious but paralyzed while dying, a sentient witness of his or her own asphyxiation.” Futility Gangland killings, air piracy, drive-by shootings, and kidnapping for ransom are among the graver felonies that continue to be committed because some individuals think they are too clever to get caught. Political terrorism is usually committed in the name of an ideology that honors its martyrs; trying to cope with it by threatening terrorists with death penalty is futile.
66 The Best of Just English TASK 5. Read the text below and write down the main ideas in Russian paying special attention to the words and expressions given in bold type. Translate them into English. Use the vocabulary from the Unit to render the text into English: Пришло время отменить смертную казнь. С каждым годом это становится все более очевидным. Опыт всех стран показывает, что смертная казнь приводит к ожесточению в обществе. В ряде стран смертные приговоры применяются в основном к представителям неимущих слоев населения либо расовых или этнических мень- шинств. В некоторых странах смертная казнь считается мерой, без кото- рой невозможно остановить распространение наркотиков, ликви- дировать политический терроризм, экономическую коррупцию или искоренить супружескую неверность. Однако нет никаких до- казательств, что ее применение способно снижать уровень преступ- ности или политического насилия. Смертную казнь часто исполь- зуют как средство политических репрессий, а смертные приговоры выносятся и приводятся в исполнение произвольно. Оправдывая смертную казнь, чаще всего говорят, что она не- обходима, по крайней мере временно, для блага общества. Однако имеет ли государство право лишать человека жизни? Смертная казнь — это предумышленное и хладнокровное убийство человека государством. Само существование этой меры наказания является попранием основных прав человека: междуна- родное право запрещает жестокие, негуманные или унижающие че- ловека наказания. Многовековой опыт применения высшей меры наказания и на- учные исследования о взаимосвязи смертной казни и уровня пре- ступностине дали убедительных доказательств, что смертная казнь способна эффективно защитить общество от преступности или спо- собствовать правосудию. Ни одна система уголовной юстиции не доказала свою способность последовательно и справедливо решать, кто должен жить и кто — умереть. Некоторым удается избежать смертной казни с помощью квалифицированных защитников; другим — потому что их судят мягкосердечные судьи или присяж- ные; третьим помогают их политические связи или положение в об- ществе. Однако существует определенный процент судебных оши- бок, последствия которых особенно трагичны в случае приведения смертного приговора в исполнение.
Базовый курс 67 CREATIVE WRITING Using the information and vocabulary from the Unit write an essay on one of the following statements: • Relaxation of harsh laws has never led to increase in crime. • Those in favour of capital punishment are motivated only by desire for revenge and retaliation. • Hanging, electric chairs, garroting, etc., are barbaric practices, unworthy of human beings. • Suspension of capital punishment is enlightened and civilised. • Capital punishment creates, it does not solve, problems. • Crime can only be drastically reduced by the elimination of social injustices. DEBATE There is no room for capital punishment in a civilized society. Divide into groups — pro and con — and conduct a debate on the necessity of capital punishment. Appoint the ‘Chair ’ ofthe debate who will give thefloor to the speakers of both teams. Use the active vocabulary from the Unit.

CHAPTER III LAW ENFORCEMENT
UNIT 1 THE HISTORY OF POLICE FORCES BRAINSTORM The word POLICE means, generally, the arrangements made in all civilised countries to ensure that the inhabitants keep the peace and obey the law. The word also denotes the force of peace officers (or police) employed for this purpose. Which of the actions above can be performed by a POLICE OFFICER? Sort out the odd words. Explain your choice. • to apprehend • to defend in court • to convict • to detain • to imprison • to investigate • to lock up • to safeguard • to plead guilty • to search • to seize • to sentence • to take into custody TASK 1. Read the text and translate the sentences given in bold type in writing: From the History of Police Forces Police is the agency of a community or government that is responsible for maintaining public order and preventing and detecting crime. The basic police mission — preserving order by enforcing rules of conduct or laws — was the same in ancient societies as it is in the contemporary sophisticated urban environments. The conception of the police force as a protective and law enforcement organisation developed from the use of military bodies as guardians of the peace, such as the Praetorian Guard — bodyguard of the ancient Roman emperors. The Romans achieved a high level of law enforcement, which remained in effect until the decline of the empire and the onset of the Middle Ages.
Базовый курс 71 During the Middle Ages, policing authority was the responsibility of local nobles on their individual estates. Each noble generally appointed an official, known as a constable, to carry out the law. The constable’s duties included keeping the peace and arresting and guarding criminals. For many decades constables were unpaid citizens who took turns at the job, which became increasingly burdensome and unpopular. By the mid-16th century, wealthy citizens often resorted to paying deputies to assume their turns as constables; as this practice became widespread, the quality of the constables declined drastically. Police forces developed throughout the centuries, taking various forms. In France during the 17th century King Louis XIV maintained a small central police organisation consisting of some forty inspectors who, with the help of numerous paid informants, supplied the government with details about the conduct of private individuals. The king could then exercise the kind of justice he saw fit. This system continued during the reigns of Louis XV and Louis XVI. After the French Revolution, two separate police bodies were set up, one to handle ordinary duties and the other to deal with political crimes. In 1663 the city of London began paying watchmen (generally old men who were unable to find other work) to guard the streets at night. Until the end of the 18tb century, the watchmen — as inefficient as they were — along with a few constables, remained the only form of policing in the city. The inability of watchmen and constables to curb lawlessness, particularly in London, led to a demand for a more effective force to deal with criminals and to protect the population. After much deliberation in Parliament, the British statesman Sir Robert Peel in 1829 established the London Metropolitan Police, which became the world’s first modem organised police force. The force was guided by the concept of crime prevention as a primary police objective; it also embodied the belief that such a force should depend on the consent and cooperation of the public, and the idea that police constables were to be civil and courteous to the people. The Metropolitan Police force was well organised and disciplined and, after an initial period of public skepticism, became the model for other police forces in Great Britain. Several years later the Royal Irish Constabulary was formed, and Australia, India, and Canada soon established similar organisations. Other countries followed, impressed by the success of the plan, until nations throughout the world had adopted police systems based on the British model. The development of the British police system is especially
72 The Best of Just English significant because the pattern that emerged had great influence on the style of policing in almost all industrial societies. In the U.S., the first full-time organised police departments were formed in New York City in 1845 and shortly thereafter in Boston, not only in response to crime but also to control unrest. The American police adopted many British methods, but at times they became involved in local politics. The British police, on the other hand, have traditionally depended on loyalty to the law, rather than to elected public officials, as the source of their authority and independence. TASK 2. Answer the following questions: 1. What is the basic police mission? 2. How did the police force as law enforcement organisation arise and develop? 3. Why did the quality of the constables in England decline? 4. How were policing functions performed in France? 5. What was the form of policing London in the 17th century? 6. Why was there a need for a more effective force to deal with criminals in England? 7. What factors brought about the establishment of the Metropolitan Police Force? 8. What principles were the British police guided by? 9. Why did the Metropolitan Police Force become the model for other police forces in Britain and abroad? 10. Why is the development of the British police system especially significant? TASK 3. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. дебаты в парламенте 2. обеспечивать соблюдение правил поведения 3. основная задача полиции (2) 4. оставаться в силе 5. платный осведомитель 6. нести полицейскую службу 7. предупреждение преступности 8. раскрывать преступления 9. сдерживать рост преступности 10. следить за соблюдением законов
Базовый курс 73 11. постоянно действующая организация 12. полицейские структуры 13. обеспечение правопорядка 14. блюститель порядка TASK 4. Find in the texts above the expressions containing the words “law” and “order”. Continue the following lists. Add more expressions using a dictionary: — to maintain public order — to enforce laws UNIT 2 THE ORGANISATION OF POLICE FORCES The British Police The British police officer is a well-known figure to anyone who has visited Britain or who has seen British films. Policemen are to be seen in towns and cities keeping law and order, either walking in pairs down the streets (“walking the beat”) or driving specially marked police cars. Once known as ‘panda cars’ because of their distinctive markings, these are now often jokingly referred to as ‘jam sandwiches’ because of the pink fluorescent stripe running horizontally around the bodywork. In the past, policemen were often known as ‘bobbies’ after Sir Robert Peel, the founder of the police force. Nowadays, common nicknames include ‘the cops’, ‘the fuzz’, ‘the pigs’, and ‘the Old Bill’ (particularly in London). Few people realise, however, that the police in Britain are organised very differently from many other countries. Most countries, for example, have a national police force which is controlled by central Government. Britain has no national police force, although police policy is governed by the central Government’s Home Office. Instead, there is a separate police force for each of 52 areas into which the country is divided. Each has a police authority — a committee of local county councillors and magistrates. The forces co-operate with each other, but it is unusual for members of one force to operate in another’s area unless they are asked to give
74 The Best of Just English assistance. This sometimes happens when there has been a very serious crime. A Chief Constable (the most senior police officer of a force) may sometimes ask for the assistance of London’s police force, based at New Scotland Yard — known simply as “the Yard”. In most countries the police carry guns. In Britain, however, this is extremely unusual. Policemen do not, as a rule, carry firearms in their day- to-day work, though certain specialist units are trained to do so and can be called upon to help the regular police force in situations where firearms are involved, e.g. terrorist incidents, armed robberies, etc. The only policemen who routinely carry weapons are those assigned to guard politicians and diplomats, or special officers who patrol airports. In certain circumstances specially trained police officers can be armed, but only with the signed permission of a magistrate. All members of the police must have gained a certain level of academic qualifications at school and undergone a period of intensive training. Like in the army, there are a number of ranks: after the Chief Constable comes the Assistant Chief Constable, Chief Superintendent, Chief Inspector, Inspector, Sergeant and Constable. Women make up about 10 per cent of the police force. The police are helped by a number of Special Constables — members of the public who work for the police voluntarily for a few hours a week. Each police force has its own Criminal Investigation Department (CID). Members of CIDs are detectives, and they do not wear uniforms. The other uniformed people you see in British towns are traffic wardens. Their job is to make sure that drivers obey the parking regulations. They have no other powers — it is the police who are responsible for controlling offences like speeding, careless driving and drunken driving. The duties of the police are varied, ranging from assisting at accidents to safeguarding public order and dealing with lost property. One of their main functions is, of course, apprehending criminals and would-be criminals. TASK 1. Answer the following questions: 1. Who was the founder of the British police? 2. What does ‘walking the beat’ mean? 3. Why are British police cars called ‘jam-sandwich’ cars in colloquial speech? 4. Is there a single police force, organised by central government? 5. What is the major difference in police organisation between Britain and some other countries? 6. When do British police forces co-operate with each other?
Базовый курс 75 7. What is the name of London’s police headquarters? 8. In what situations can policemen carry arms? 9. What are the ranks of policemen? 10. What is the job of CID officers? 11. What are the duties of traffic wardens? 12. What is Scotland Yard and what does it do? TASK 2. Read the text and fill in the gaps with the appropriate words and expressions from the previous text: In Britain different areas have different_________. For instance, the Metropolitan police operate in London, but there are different police forces in the counties outside London. The top man in each police force is______________________. He is appointed by the local Watch Committee which is a_________________of the local government. The Watch Committee can dismiss him, too, if the central government agrees. The Chief Constable appoints all the below him in his force. Things are slightly different in London. The top man is known as the Metropolitan Police Commissioner and his appointment is arranged through the central government. British police are normally not______. In special cases, when their work becomes dangerous, they can be given___________however. As is well known, the___________of the British policeman is blue, with a tall helmet. These days, though, you can see a different uniform in the streets. This is the uniform with the yellow hatband worn by____ ________. Their job is simply to control traffic and______________. The most famous name connected with the British police is______ ________. It is the headquarters of the London police force. Besides dealing with local police matters, the London police also help all over England and Wales with difficult crimes. They do this at the request of the local police. TASK 3. Render the following text into English using the information and vocabulary from the texts above: В Великобритании существует 52 полицейских подразделения: 43 в Англии и Уэльсе, 8 в Шотландии и 1 в Северной Ирландии. Сто- личная полиция и полиция лондонского Сити отвечают за охрану общественного порядка в Лондоне. Кроме того, специальное подраз- деление транспортной полиции патрулирует железнодорожную сеть, а также метро Лондона.
Tf) The Best of Just English Полицейская служба финансируется центральным правитель- ством и местными властями. Каждое полицейское подразделение имеет своих специальных констеблей-добровольцев, которые рабо- тают в полиции в свободное время и помогают кадровым офицерам полиции, причем их работа не оплачивается. Они являются своеоб- разным связующим звеном между полицией и населением. Полицейские подразделения Англии и Уэльса подведомствен- ны органам местной полиции. Столичная полиция находится в под- чинении у Министра внутренних дел. Подразделения в областях воз- главляют главные констебли. Они несут ответственность за свою работу перед центральными полицейскими органами, которые назна- чают начальника полиции и его помощника. Комиссар Столичной полиции и его непосредственные подчиненные назначаются по ре- комендации министра внутренних дел. TASK 4. Complete the following text with the words and phrases from the box: walkie-talkie, plain clothes, detective, uniform, policeman, police force, rank, join к________________________________________________________________________/ Alan is now old enough and tall enough to__________the______________. At first, of course, he’ll be an ordinary of the lowest. He’ll wear a__________and go out in the streets keeping in touch with the police station with his_______________. Then he’d like to be a_________in investigating serious crimes. TASK 5. Look at the picture and read the police bulletin: Crime: Armed Robbery Location: Brixton & Park Streets Date: August 13, 2003 The public’s assistance is requested in identifying the person or persons responsible for an armed robbery on the southwest comer of Brixton and Park Streets intersection. This crime occurred at 1:30 p.m. on August 13, 2003. At about 1:30 p.m. the victim, a young visitor to the city, was walking along Brixton St.
Базовый курс 77 At the southwest comer of Brixton and Park Streets, the suspect jumped in front of the victim, pulled a knife from his jacket and said, “Give me your purse or you’re stuck!” The victim handed it over and the suspect fled the scene of the crime. The suspect is described as a white male, 20—25 years old, medium build, 5’2", moustache, blue eyes, short brown hair, flat nose. He was wearing a red baseball cap with a Montreal Canadians logo, a dark blue jacket, green jeans and white sneakers. This man is armed and therefore dangerous. If you can identify the man in the photofit picture, or have any information on this or any crime, contact the local Police Department or Crime Stoppers at 1 -800-555- 8477, and you may be eligible for a cash reward. TASK 6. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: • подозреваемый • жертва • вооруженное ограбление • фоторобот • денежное вознаграждение • опознать преступника • скрыться с места преступления TASK 7. Find in the text the description of the criminal and compose an opposite one: e.g. “The suspect is described as black, very tall... ” Use some of the expressions given below: FACE — long, round, oval, thin, plump, fleshy, puffy, wrinkled, pasty, pimpled, pock-marked, clean-shaven FEATURES — clean-cut, delicate, forceful, regular / irregular, large, small, stem COMPLEXION — fair, pale, dark, sallow HAIR—curly, wavy, straight, receding (scanty), rumpled, shoulder-length, medium-length, short-cut, crew-cut, bobbed, dyed, bald, fair /dark- haired FOREHEAD — high, low, narrow, square, broad EYES — hollowed, bulging, close-set, deep-set, sunken, wide-apart, crossed-eyed EYEBROWS — thin, thick, bushy, arched, pencilled, shaggy EARS — small, big, jug-eared NOSE — prominent, straight, pointed, hooked, flat, aquiline, snub-nosed LIPS — full, thin, painted, cleft lip TEETH — even / uneven, sparse, artificial
78 The Best of Just English CHEEKS — plump, hollow, ruddy, stubby CHIN — square, pointed, double, massive, protruding BEARD — full, bushy, spade beard, grey-bearded, heavy-bearded MOUSTACHE — thin, thick, tooth-brush, walrus HEIGHT — tall, short, of medium height BUILT — average, medium built, well-built, plump, skinny DISTINGUISHING FEATURES — birthmarks, freckles, scars, wooden leg, humpback, pot-belly TASK 8. Translate the following police bulletin into English and make the corresponding photofit: ИХ РАЗЫСКИВАЕТ МИЛИЦИЯ Разыскиваются преступники, совершив- шие убийство 21 сентября в доме номер 99 по проспекту Мира. Первый: На вид 30 лет, рост 170—175 см, худощавого телосложения, волосы чер- ные прямые, лицо круглое, нос прямой, глаза слегка навыкате. Был одет: темная короткая кожаная кур- тка, светлые брюки, коричневые ботин- ки. Носит темные очки в металлической Второй: На вид 40 лет, рост 175—180 см, плотного телосложения, волосы светлые, вьющиеся до плеч, лицо овальное, нос курносый, брови густые. Был одет: темная удлиненная кожаная куртка, темные брюки. Любую имеющуюся информацию прось- ба сообщить по телефону 222-33-22, или 02. оправе. Just for Fun A beautiful blonde walked into a Chicago police station and gave the desk sergeant a detailed description of a man who had dragged her by the hair down three flights of stairs, threatened to choke her to death and finally beat her up. “With this description we’ll have him arrested in no time,” said the desk sergeant. “But I don’t want him arrested”, the young woman protested. “Just find him for me. He promised to marry me.” * * * — Can you describe the individual? — He was about medium height and had a beard. — Was this a male or a female?
Базовый курс 79 ROLE-PLAY Identify the suspect! There has been a string of bank robberies in the local area recently. Police are investigating the crimes and making the photofits of the suspects. Work in pairs. Each pair should consist of a police inspector and a witness. STEP 1. The police inspector is questioning the eye-witness to find out all the necessary details of the suspect's appearance. STEP 2. Using the information obtained they make up a photofit by completing the drawings below. UNIT 3 POLICE POWERS TASK. 1. Read the text and translate words and expressions given in bold type in writing: The powers of a police officer in England and Wales to stop and search, arrest and place a person under detention are contained in the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984. The legislation and the code of practice set out the powers and responsibilities of officers in the investigation of offences, and the rights of citizens. 4 — 9099
80 The Best of Just English An officer is liable to disciplinary proceedings if he or she fails to comply with any provision of the codes, and evidence obtained in breach of the codes may be ruled inadmissible in court. The code must be readily available in all police stations for consultation by police officers, detained people and members of the public. Stop and Search A police officer in England and Wales has the power to stop and search people and vehicles if there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that he or she will find stolen goods, offensive weapons or implements that could be used for theft, burglary or other offences. The officer must, however, state and record the grounds for taking this action and what, if anything, was found. The Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 enables a senior police officer to authorise uniformed officers to stop and search people or vehicles for offensive weapons, dangerous implements where he or she has reasonable grounds for believing that serious incidents of violence may take place. The officer must specify the time-scale and area in which the powers are to be exercised. Arrest In England and Wales the police have wide powers to arrest people suspected of having committed an offence with or without a warrant issued by a court. For serious offences, known as ‘arrestable offences’, a suspect can be arrested without a warrant. Arrestable offences are those for which five or more years’ imprisonment can be imposed. This category also includes ‘serious arrestable offences’ such as murder, rape and kidnapping. There is also a general arrest power for all other offences if it is impracticable or inappropriate to send out a summons to appear in court, or if the police officer has reasonable grounds for believing that arrest is necessary to prevent the person concerned from causing injury to any other person or damage to property. Detention, Treatment and Questioning An arrested person must be taken to a police station (if he or she is not already at one) as soon as practicable after arrest. At the station, he or she will be seen by the custody officer who will consider the reasons for the arrest and whether there are sufficient grounds for the person to be detained. The Code of Practice under the 1984 Police and Criminal Evidence Act made it clear that juveniles should not be placed in the cells. Most police stations should have adetention room for those juveniles who need to be detained. The suspect has a right to speak to an
Базовый курс 81 POLICE CAUTION You do not have to say anything but it may harm your defence if you do not mention when questioned something which you later rely on in court, anything you do say may be given in evidence. independent solicitor free of charge and to have a relative or other named person told of his or her arrest. Where a person has been arrested in connection with a serious arrestable offence, but has not yet been charged, the police may delay the exercise of these rights for up to 36 hours in the interests of the investigation if certain strict criteria are met. A suspect may refuse to answer police questions or to give evidence in court. Changes to this so-called ‘right to silence’ have been made by the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 to allow courts in England and Wales to draw inferences from a defendant’s refusal to answer police questions or to give information during his or her trial. Reflecting this change in the law, a new form of police caution (which must precede any questions to a suspect for the purpose of obtaining evidence) is intended to ensure that people understand the possible consequences if they answer questions or stay silent. Questions relating to an offence may not normally be put to a person after he or she has been charged with that offence or informed that he or she may be prosecuted for it. The length of time a suspect is held in police custody before charge is strictly regulated. For lesser offences this may not exceed 24 hours. A person suspected of committing a serious arrestable offence can be detained for up to 96 hours without charge but beyond 36 hours only if a warrant is obtained from a magistrates’ court. Reviews must be made of a person’s detention at regular intervals — six hours after initial detention and thereafter every nine hours as a maximum—to check whether the criteria for detention are still satisfied. If they are not, the person must be released immediately. Interviews with suspected offenders at police stations must be tape- recorded when the police are investigating indictable offences and in certain other cases. The police are not precluded from taping interviews for other types of offences. The taping of interviews is regulated by a code of practice approved by Parliament, and the suspect is entitled to a copy of the tape. A person who thinks that the grounds for detention are unlawful may apply to the High Court in England and Wales fora writ of Habeas Corpus against the person who detained him or her, requiring that person to appear before the court to justify the detention. Habeas Corpus proceedings take precedence over others. Similar procedures apply in Northern Ireland 4*
82 The Best of Just English and a similar remedy is available to anyone who is unlawfully detained in Scotland. Recognising that the use of DNA analysis has become a powerful tool in the investigation of crime, the Government has extended police powers to take body samples from suspects. The Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 allows the police to take non-intimate samples without consent from anyone who is detained or convicted for a recordable offence, and to use the samples to search against existing records of convicted offenders or unsolved crimes. In time a national database will be built up. Charging Once there is sufficient evidence, the police have to decide whether a detained person should be charged with the offence. If there is insufficient evidence to charge, the person maybe released on bail pending further enquiries by the police. The police may decide to take no further action in respect of a particular offence and to release the person. Alternatively, they may decide to issue him or her with a formal caution, which will be recorded and may be taken into account if he or she subsequently re-offends. If charged with an offence, a person may be kept in custody if there is a risk that he or she might fail to appear in court or might interfere with the administration of justice. When no such considerations apply, the person must be released on or without bail. Where someone is detained after charge, he or she must be brought before a magistrates’ court as soon as practicable. This is usually no later than the next working day. TASK 2. Answer the following questions: 1. What are the main police powers in England and Wales? 2. In what cases can a police officer stop and search the suspect? 3. What does the procedure of stop and search consists of? 4. What are the provisions of 1994 Criminal Justice and Public Order Act? 5. What document is necessary to carry out an arrest? 6. What are the arrestable offences? 7. When can a person be arrested without a warrant? 8. Where should the suspects be taken after arrest? 9. What rights does the arrested person have? 10. When can the exercise of these rights be delayed? 11. What is the police caution? 12. What does the ‘right of silence’ consist of? What can the consequences of using this right be for the suspect?
Базовый курс 83 13. How long can a person be kept in custody before being charged? 14. What is the procedure of interviewing the detained person at the police station? 15. What can a person do in case of unlawful detention? 16. What are the provisions of the Habeas Corpus Act? 17. What happens to a person after he or she has been charged? TASK 3. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. задержание и досмотр 2. процессуальный кодекс 3. расследование преступлений 4. права граждан 5. преступления, в связи с которыми может быть произведен арест 6. судебная повестка 7. причинение ущерба / нанесение телесных повреждений 8. право не отвечать на вопросы 9. преступления, рассматриваемые по обвинительному акту 10. основания для задержания 11. расширенные полномочия полиции 12. запротоколированное, зарегистрированное преступление 13. веские / достаточные доказательства 14. полицейский участок 15. подлежать дисциплинарному взысканию 16. иметь веские/разумные основания 17. уполномочивать, давать право 18. принимать меры 19. совершать повторные правонарушения TASK 4. Translate the following text in writing: The Miranda Warning “You have the right to remain silent; anything you say can be used against you...”, these are the words of the “Miranda warning” which was created as a result of 1966 United States Supreme Court case, Miranda vs. Arizona. It began when Ernesto Miranda was arrested at his home and taken into custody to the police station, where he was identified by a witness as the man who had kidnapped and raped a
84 The Best of Just English woman. Police officers took Mr. Miranda into an interrogation room and two hours later emerged with a written confession signed by Mr. Miranda that also stated that the confession was made voluntarily and with full knowledge of his legal rights. The officers, however, failed to advise Mr. Miranda that he had a right to have an attorney present. The United States Supreme Court ruled that the confession could not be used as evidence of Mr. Miranda’s guilt because he was not fully advised on his legal rights, which included the right to have his attorney present. The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution states that no person can be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law. To ensure that other accused criminals are made aware of their constitutional rights, the Supreme Court ruled that a suspect who is taken into custody and interrogated must receive a warning of the following rights: the right to remain silent, that anything he says can be used against him in a court of law, that he has a right of the presence of an attorney, and that if he can not afford an attorney, one will be appointed for him prior to any questioning if he so desires. The ‘Miranda warning’ is now applied by law officers throughout the United States as a result of this ruling. TASK 5. Match the following English expressions with their Russian equivalents: 1) credit for time in custody 2) defendant not in custody 3) detention in custody 4) escape by person in custody 5) in-custody confession 6) in-custody interrogation 7) person in custody 8) remand in custody 9) retention in custody 10) to discharge from custody 11) to keep in custody 12) to submit to custody а) возвращение под стражу b) дальнейшее содержание под стражей с) передать, препроводить под стражу d) допрос лица, находящегося под стражей е) содержать под стражей f) зачёт времени пребывания под стражей g) лицо, содержащееся под стражей h) освободить из-под стражи i) побег из-под стражи j) подсудимый, находящийся на свободе к) признание, сделанное лицом, находящимся под стражей 1) содержание под стражей
Базовый курс 85 TASK 6. Fill in the gaps in the text below with the appropriate words from the box: theft; sentence; charge; fine; fingerprints; oath; arrest; evidence; cell; court; magistrate; handcuff; witnesses; investigate; detained; pleaded; found A policeman was sent to_______________the disappearance of some property from a hotel. When he arrived, he found that the hotel staff had caught a boy in one of the rooms with a camera and some cash. When the policeman tried to________________the boy, he became violent and the policeman had to him. At the police station the boy could not give a satisfactory explanation for his actions and the police decided to him with the of the camera and cash. They took his, locked him in a, and him overnight. The next morning he appeared in before the . He took an and not guilty. Two , the owner of the property and a member of the hotel staff, gave. After both sides of the case had been heard the boy was guilty. He had to pay a of £50 and he was given a of three months in prison suspended for two years. TASK 7. Fill in the gaps with the prepositions from the box. Some of these can be used more than once: before; in; to; of; with 1. He’s being kept custody. 2. He was sentenced five years. 3. She got a sentence six months. 4. He was accused murder. 5. She’s been charged theft. 6. He appeared court handcuffs. 7. They were brought the judge.
86 The Best of Just English TASK 8. Study the newspaper article below and discuss the problems of juvenile custody: Boy, 15, Dies after Hanging in Police Cell A fresh controversy was looming yesterday over the care of juveniles in custody when a 15-year-old boy died after being found unconscious in a police cell. The teenager was rumoured to have tried to hang himself in the cell at Hartlepool police station, although the results of a post-mortem examination conducted yesterday will not be released until today. The 15-year-old had been arrested on suspicion of burglary and was found unconscious by custody officers at 3.15 p.m. on Monday. The officers resuscitated him before paramedics rushed him to the general hospital. He was put on a life support system but died at 1 a.m. yesterday morning. The death will be viewed as particularly controversial because juveniles are not supposed to be held in police cells under any circumstances. Under the 1984 Code of Practice juveniles should not be placed in the cells. “Most police stations would have a detention room for those juveniles who need to be detained. The rooms are much more spacious and less intimidating than cells and, crucially, nearer the custody officer. But juveniles are sometimes put in cells because there is nowhere else to put them”, Mark Grindrod, juvenile project manager for the Howard League for Penal Reform, said. “If you have juveniles in custody you have to have particular concerns about their vulnerability, because they are particularly prone to carrying out acts which perhaps they do not fully think through. That’s why we have such specific and stringent rules about interviewing and detaining juveniles, both in police stations or prisons.” A juvenile should not be held in a cell before being interviewed and a decision over whether to charge him or her is reached. Once a decision to charge has been made, police can bail the young person into the care of social services, or send him or her home, pending a court appearance. Cleveland Police voluntarily referred the case to the Police Complaints Authority. TASK 9. Study the selection of newspaper articles covering shop-lifting cases. Comment on the penalties given in each case Let Off with a Caution Fourteen-year-old Jane was lucky this time. Caught by a store detective with a bottle of hair conditioner, eye-lash dye, and a copy of Hello magazine hidden in her bag, she found herself in a van being driven to the police station. Even more upset than Jane was her Mum. She was as white as a sheet when she went to collect Jane from police station, and burst into tears.
Базовый курс 87 Jane says, “I was lucky. Two policemen came and looked at my home, which is very middle class and respectable. I think that’s why they let me off. They even asked to see my school books.” After two years of regular shop-lifting, Jane has decided to go straight from now on. She Yellow Roy Philips Downfall was the colour fellow. Appearing in court on shop-lifting charges, he wore a yellow parka, yellow shirt, yellow pants, and a yellow tie. It was a similar dress that drew him to the attention of the store detective at a supermarket in Oldham, says she did it mostly out of boredom, and not to impress her friends as a lot of youngsters do. But she feels she’s grown out of it after the fright she got the other day, and has decided to look for other interests. Fever England, where everything he was after had a yellow connection: lemons, jellies, mustard, cheese, three pairs of socks, and two pairs of underpants. He was given a one- month suspended sentence. Shop-lifting Celebrity Anna Bronx, the well-known TV personality, was found dead in her flat in Knightsbridge this morning after taking an overdose of sleeping pills. The tragedy occurred less than a month after she had appeared in court on a charge of shop-lifting in a department store. It was claimed that she had taken goods worth £7.30 when she was arrested outside the store. She was sentenced to a fine of £100, and was given a two-week suspended sentence. Mrs. Bronx was for many years a well-loved personality on a popular programme, but for the last several years had withdrawn from public life and was living by herself. Friends say that they did not think she was unhappy, but that she may have been a little bored after such an active public life. It was of course a great shock when she was arrested for shop-lifting. Local feeling was that the magistrate had been far too severe, a feeling that can only grow after this tragic incident. TASK 10. Retell each story as if you were a Store Detective or Police Officer giving evidence in court. Use some of the Colour Idioms given below: • to catch smb. red-handed — to catch smb. during his or her committing a crime • to be in the red — to be broke, having no money • to see red — to get terribly angry • to appear out of the blue — from nowhere, unexpectedly • in the black and white — in a very clear way
88 The Best of Just English It’s Interesting to Know! To be caught red-handed means to be caught in the act of crime. The guilt of the person is usually not in doubt. If you find a burglar in your living room holding some valuables that belong to you, then that person is said to have been caught red-handed. Red-handed connotes hands red with blood. The expression dates back to the time when it was almost impossible to prove that somebody was guilty of a crime unless the person confessed — usually under torture — or was caught in the act of committing a crime. One crime was the killing of another man’s cow, sheep or pig. There was also a law which forbade the killing of the king’s deer in the forests of England. If a person was caught in possession of fresh meat, this was not usually enough to prove the person’s guilt. It was only when a person was caught with both a dead animal and blood on his hands that there was enough evidence for the person to be arrested and then convicted. ROLE-PLAY The Lure of Shop-lifting Role-play the stories above. Act as a Police Officer who stops, searches, questions the offender and prepares a record of the case for the magistrate’s court. Act as a Detained Person who is being questioned in police custody. UNIT 4 POLICE AND THE PUBLIC The Lasting Principles In 1829 Sir Richard Mayne, one of the founders of Scotland Yard, wrote: “The primary object of an efficient police is the prevention of crime
Базовый курс 89 and detection and punishment of offenders if crime is committed. To these ends all the efforts of police must be directed. The protection of life and property, the preservation of public tranquillity, and the absence of crime, will alone prove whether those efforts have been successful and whether the objects for which the police were appointed have been attained.” In attaining these objects, much depends on the approval and co- operation of the public, and these have always been determined by the degree of esteem and respect in which the police are held. Therefore, every member of the Force must remember that it is his duty to protect and help members of the public, no less than to bring offenders to justice. Consequently, while prompt to prevent crime and arrest criminals, he must look on himself as the servant and guardian of the general public and treat all law-abiding citizens, irrespective of their race, colour, creed or social position, with unfailing patience and courtesy. By the use of tact and good humour the public can normally be induced to comply with directions and thus the necessity for using force is avoided. If, however, persuasion, advice or warning is found to be ineffective, a resort to force may become necessary, as it is imperative that a police officer being required to take action shall act with the firmness necessary to render it effective. TASK 1. Answer the following questions: 1. What are the objects of the police work according to Sir Richard Mayne? 2. How should the co-operation between the police and the public be achieved? 3. Why is the principle of police-public co-operation so important? TASK 2. Read the text and translate the expressions given in bold type in writing: Police Discipline The police are not above the law and must act within it. A police officer is an agent of the law of the land and may be sued or prosecuted for any wrongful act committed in the performance of police duties. Officers are also subject to a disciplinary code designed to deal with abuse of police powers and maintain public confidence in police impartiality. If found guilty of breaching the code, an officer can be dismissed from the force. Members of the public have the right to make complaints against police officers if they feel that they have been treated unfairly or
90 The Best of Just English improperly. In England and Wales the investigation and resolution of complaints is scrutinised by the independent Police Complaints Authority. The Authority must supervise any case involving death or serious injury and has discretion to supervise in any other case. In addition, the Authority reviews chief constables’ proposals on whether disciplinary charges should be brought against an officer who has been the subject of a complaint. If the chief constable does notrecommend formal disciplinary charges, the Authority may, if it disagrees with the decision, recommend and, if necessary, direct that charges be brought. The Government aims to ensure that the quality of service provided by police forces in Britain inspires public confidence, and that the police have theactive support and involvement of the communities which they serve. The police service is taking effective action to improve performance and standards. All forces in England and Wales have to consult with the communities they serve and develop policing policies to meet community demands. They have to be more open and explicit about their operations and the standards of service that they offer. Virtually all forces have liaison departments designed to develop closer contact between the force and the community. These departments consist of representatives from the police, local councillors and community groups. Particular efforts are made to develop relations with young people through greater contact with schools and their pupils. The Government has repeatedly stated its commitment to improve relations between the police and ethnic minorities. Central guidance recommends that all police officers should receive a thorough training in community and race relations issues. Home Office and police initiatives are designed to tackle racially motivated crime and to ensure that the issue is seen as a priority by the police.Discriminatory behaviour by police officers, either to other officers or to members of the public, is an offence under the Police Discipline Code. All police forces recognise the need to recruit women and members of the ethnic minorities in order to ensure that the police represent the community. Every force has an equal opportunities policy. TASK 3. Answer the following questions: 1. What disciplinary measures are police officers subject to? 2. What authorities supervise police conduct? 3. What helps improve police-public co-operation? 4. What is a liaison department? 5. How are race related issues tackled by the police?
Базовый курс 91 TASK 4. Complete the following text with the words and expressions from the box: misconduct; opinion polls; justice; sympathy; mob violence; failures; complaints; terrorist offence; to confess Most people have a positive attitude to the police, and have indicated that there is much public__________with men and women who have to deal with________________. There is a formal system through which______________of police behaviour may be investigated, but in the late 1990s it was found that these procedures had not prevented some serious _______________in the system of administering______________. Some Irish people had been convicted of a_____________________________on the basis of confessions which had been improperly extracted from them, and the truth was discovered only after they had spent several years in prison. There were other cases too in which there were grounds fbr suspecting that the police had persuaded people____________to crimes which they had not committed. Some other inquiries revealed more cases of by the police. TASK 5. Fill in the gaps with the prepositions from the box: from; to; with; to; of 1. What is your attitude__the problem of crime prevention? 2. All the sympathies of the jury were_the defendant. 3. Finally the criminal was convicted__a violent assault. 4. The detective took pains to extract information_the eye-witness. 5. After a long questioning the suspect had to confess_committing a robbery. TASK 6. Read the following newspaper article and point out the public attitude towards the police: The PC with the Golden Handcuffs The hiding places are running out for crooks on PC Peter Hilton’s patch. He has made an incredible 287 arrests in 11 months. In a crime-bustling blitz in Eccles, Salford, villains have been pinched for offences including burglary, car theft, possession of drugs, assault and drink- driving.
92 The Best of Just English Now PC Hilton has been honoured for his devotion to public service with a commendation from Greater Manchester Chief Constable David Wilmot. Mr. Willmot said it was unusual for an officer to receive an award for the number of arrests he had made rather than an individual act. PC Hilton said modestly: “I’ve just been lucky. I’ve been in the right place at the right time. Teamwork with colleagues has also played a big part. Landing the crime- ridden Eccles beat has also helped. ” The constable said that after ten years in the force he “tended to know the short cuts crooks take and also who to look for”. He added: “It’s all about knowing their behaviour patterns.” He said colleagues jokingly called him ‘Pete Lockup’, and even the crooks managed a smile as he slipped on the handcuffs. “When I pull up in the car they say. “Oh, no! It’s PC Hilton again”. I get on all right with some of them. It’s OK if they’ve done nothing wrong.” The constable, who spent eight years on the beat in Bury, has also received three Chief Superintendent’s commendations and a citation of merit from the Chief Constable for disarming a gunman. His wife Joanne said: “I’m very proud of him.” TASK 7. Translate the following words and expressions from the article above: 1. commendation 2. crime-bustling blitz 3. crook 4. PC Peter Hilton’s patch 5. Pete Lockup 6. teamwork with colleagues 7. to land the crime-ridden beat 8. to pinch 9. to receive a citation of merit 10. to take short cuts TASK 8. Find in the article above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. укрытие 2. произвести арест
Базовый курс 93 3. злодей 4. угон автомобиля 5. хранение наркотиков 6. нападение 7. вождение в нетрезвом состоянии 8. быть представленным к награде 9. разоружить преступника TASK 9. Answer the following questions: 1. What offences does Peter Hilton deal with? 2. What is unusual about his reward? 3. What helps Peter in his work? TASK 10. Read the following newspaper article and point out the public attitude towards the police: £220,000 for Victim of Police Assault A hairdresser won £220,000 damages yesterday after a jury found that he was assaulted by police and wrongfully arrested. This happened after counsel for Din Zung, 32, urged the jury to send a clear message that the public would no longer stand for “lying, bullying, racism and peijury” by the Metropolitan Police. Central London County Court was told that police went to Mr. Zung’s home over a dispute involving a leaking roof. Mr. Zung was arrested after refusing to allow officers in without a warrant. Akmal Khan, his solicitor, said his client’s arms were twisted behind his back and he was (----------------------------------------\ SOLICITOR (UK) — a qualified lawyer who advises clients, represents them in the lower courts and prepares cases for barristers to try in higher courts. COUNSEL for (the party) — here same as BARRISTER (UK) — a lawyer who has the right to plead as an advocate in a superior court. ._________________________________> handcuffed. “They punched and kicked him in the van and he was kicked in the kidneys. Another policeman used his back as a footstool and the driver turned round and insulted him verbally saying he had got no more than he deserved. The charge officer told him, “I’ve never arrested a Chink before.” When he was released at 11 p.m. that night they threw him into the street in just jeans and flip-flops. “He had to walk two miles home,” Mr. Khan said. When Mr. Zung arrived home, the front door was open and his stereo and other property had been stolen. Doctors found extensive bruising to his back and kidneys and he was passing blood.
94 The Best of Just English Mr. Zung made a formal complaint to the Police Complaints Authority. Despite a police surgeon confirming the injuries, the complaint was rejected and he decided to sue. Ben Emmerson, counsel for Mr. Zung, urged the jury to send a strong message to Sir Paul Condon by awarding damages that would hit his budget. “In this case a small award would be regarded as a victory by the officers.”. A statement issued on behalf of Sir Paul, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, said: “We believe the award to be excessive and we are to appeal against the size of the award but not the verdict.” The Metropolitan Police said no action would be taken against the constables involved: Christopher Smith, Andrew Morris and Bob Davies. In a separate case at the same court Terence Wilkinson, 27, was awarded £64,000 damages. He had accused other officers from the same area of wrongful arrest and assault, false imprisonment and malicious prosecution. TASK 11. Translate the following words and expressions from the article above: 1. bullying 2. charge officer 3. false imprisonment 4. malicious prosecution 5. award 6. to be wrongfully arrested 7. to appeal against the verdict 8. to make a complaint 9. to reject a complaint 10. to steal property 11. to take an action against smb. 12. to win damages TASK 12. Find in the article above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. лжесвидетельство 2. ордер на арест 3. телесные повреждения 4. надеть наручники 5. наносить словесные оскорбления 6. предъявлять иск
Базовый курс 95 TASK 13. Answer the following questions: 1. What did Mr.Zung’s case against Metropolitan Police consist of? 2. What were the circumstances of Mr. Zung’s arrest? 3. How did the Police Authority react to Mr. Zung’s formal complaint? 4. What were Mr. Zung’s further actions? 5. What were the formal grounds for filing the case? 6. Why was the amount of the award so important for Mr. Zung’s counsel? 7. What actions will be taken against the police officers involved? CREATIVE WRITING Study the Manifesto of the U.S. citizens against police brutality. Compile a similar Manifesto on behalf of the British public using the facts from the previous article. U.S. Public Manifesto Instead of protecting the public, police departments around the country are waging а ff campaign of violence and intimidation against the ( . I J people in our communities. In cities across the country, police kill unarmed people every month, yet the officers are rarely disciplined. In New Orleans and Philadelphia, police were caught fabricating evidence and filing false reports in thousands of cases. In New York recently, undercover cops shot an unarmed black man 15 times. Police brutality is caught on videotapes. Basta Ya! This is too much! The U.S. locks up a higher percentage of its people than any other country in the world. Jails are being built instead of schools and hospitals, and politicians are promising to put more cops on the street and pass more fascist laws to put more people in jail. But who will protect us from the system ? Who will protect the people being routinely brutalized for being the wrong colour or being homeless or poor? Who will protect our youth who are arrested andjailed, by cops for how they look and dress? IT’S UP TO US TO STOP THE EPIDEMIC OF POLICE ABUSE AND VIOLENCE! Today, as politicians push anti-crime propaganda and laws, and anti- civil rights initiatives, we can strike a note of truth if we raise our voices
96 The Best of Just English loud enough and bring into streets a message that cannot be ignored. We are calling on people of all races and backgrounds to stand up and say that we will no longer put up with all this. JOIN US IN MAKING THIS DA YA POWERFUL REALITY! ROLE-PLAY Good or Evil? Role-play the press conference on the principles of police ethics: Participants: Peter Hilton — the honourable PC Jack ‘Gorilla’ — a crook from PC Hilton s patch Ben Emmerson — the defence counsel Andrew Morris and Bob Davies — the evil policemen The rest of the class are journalists who are free to ask questions. Make sure that different views are expressed. Use the information given in the Unit. UNIT 5 SCOTLAND YARD The History of Scotland Yard The task of organising and designing the ‘New Police’ was placed in the hands of Colonel Charles Rowan and Sir Richard Mayne. These two Commissioners occupied a private house at 4, Whitehall Palace, the back of which opened on to a courtyard, which had been the site of a residence owned by the Kings of Scotland and known as ‘Scotland Yard’. Since the place was used as a police station, the headquarters of the Metropolitan Police became known as Scotland Yard. These headquarters were removed in 1890 to premises on the Victoria Embankment and became known as ‘New Scotland Yard’; but in 1967, because of the need for a larger and more modem headquarters building, a further removal took place to the present site at Victoria Street (10 Broadway), which is also known as ‘New Scotland Yard’.
Базовый курс 97 The Force suffered many trials and difficulties in overcoming public hostility and opposition. But, by their devotion to duty and constant readiness to give help and advice coupled with kindliness and good humour, they eventually gained the approval and trust of the public. This achievement has been fostered and steadily maintained throughout the history of the Force, so that today its relationship with the public is established on the firmest foundation of mutual respect and confidence. TASK 1. Answer the following questions: 1. Who was responsible for organising and designing the ‘New Police’? 2. Why did the headquarters of the Metropolitan Police become known as Scotland Yard? 3. What is ‘New Scotland Yard’ and where is it currently located? 4. What difficulties in relations with the public did the force suffer? 5. What is the main principle of the Force’s relationship with the public? TASK 2. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. главное полицейское управление 2. Столичная полиция 3. комиссар полиции 4. претерпевать невзгоды 5. преодолеть враждебное отношение 6. завоевать доверие общественности 7. на основе взаимного уважения TASK 3. Fill in the gaps in the text below with the appropriate words from the previous text: Scotland Yard is a popular name for the_____________of London’s Metropolitan Police Force, and especially its Criminal Investigation Department. The name is derived from a small area where the headquarters was situated from 1829 to 1890. The area, in turn, was named after___ _________of Scottish kings in London. The custom of referring to the headquarters as began soon after the was reorganised by the British statesman Sir Robert Peel in 1829. The headquarters was moved in 1890 to new buildings erected on the Thames Embankment, which were known as . In
98 The Best of Just English 1967 the present headquarters, a modem 20-storey building situated near the Houses of Parliament, was opened. TASK 4. Read the text and translate the sentences given in bold type in writing: Scotland Yard At first the new police force encountered little cooperation from the public, and when Scotland Yard stationed its first plainclothes police agents on duty in 1842, there was a public outcry against these ‘spies’ The police force had gradually won the trust of the London public by the time Scotland Yard set up its Criminal Investigation Department (CID) in 1878. The CID was a small force of plainclothes detectives who gathered information on criminal activities. The CID was subsequently built up into the efficient investigative force that it now constitutes. It presently employs more than 1,000 detectives. The area supervised by the London Metropolitan Police includes all of Greater London with the exception of the City of London, which has its own separate police force. The Metropolitan Police’s duties are the detection and prevention of crime, the preservation of public order, the supervision of road traffic and the licensing of public vehicles, and the organisation of civil defence in case of emergency. The administrative head of Scotland Yard is the commissioner, who is appointed by the Crown on the recommendation of the Home Secretary. Beneath the commissioner are a deputy commissioner and four assistant commissioners, each of the latter being in charge of one of Scotland Yard’s four departments: administration, traffic and transport, criminal investigation (the CID), and police recruitment and training. The CID deals with all aspects of criminal investigation and comprises the criminal records office, fingerprint and photography sections, the company fraud squad, a highly mobile police unit known as the flying squad, the metropolitan police laboratory, and the detective-training school. Scotland Yard keeps extensive files on all known criminals in the United Kingdom. It also has a special branch of police who guard visiting dignitaries, royalty, and statesmen. Finally, Scotland Yard is responsible for maintaining links between British law-enforcement agencies and Interpol. Although Scotland Yard’s responsibility is limited to metropolitan London, its assistance is often sought by police in other parts of England, particularly with regard to difficult cases. The Yard also assists in the training of police personnel in the countries of the Commonwealth.
Базовый курс 99 TASK 5. Answer the following questions: 1. What was the public sentiment about the first Scotland Yard plainclothes police agents? 2. When did Scotland Yard set up its Criminal Investigation Department? 3. What were the CID’s initial duties? 4. What is the CID nowadays? 5. Which parts of London are covered by the Metropolitan Police? 6. What are the Metropolitan Police’s duties? 7. Who is the administrative head of Scotland Yard? 8. What is the structure of the CID? 9. What assistance does the Yard render to the countries of the Commonwealth? TASK 6. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. ‘Большой’ Лондон 2. правоохранительные органы 3. отдел регистрации преступлений и преступников 4. ‘летучий отряд’ 5. чрезвычайное положение 6. пребывание на службе 7. министр внутренних дел 8. Департамент уголовного розыска 9. выдача водительских удостоверений 10. отдел по борьбе с мошенничеством 11. полицейский в штатском 12. преступная деятельность 13. завоевать доверие 14. быть назначенным королевой 15. направлять на место работы 16. собирать сведения TASK 7. Fill in the gaps in the text below with the words and expressions from the box: guards; tap; armoured vehicles; bullet-proof; kidnappers; couriers; bug; security firm; private detectives
100 The Best of Just English “Sherlock and Holmes” is a which offers a complete range of security services. We have_______________________with special ____________windows to transport money and other valuable items. We can supply trained__________to protect exhibits at art shows and jewellery displays. We can advise you if you think someone is trying to__________ your phone or your private conversations at home or in the office with hidden microphones. We have ex-policemen whom you can hire as __________________and special___________to deliver your valuable parcels anywhere in the world. We can protect you or your children against possible CREATIVE WRITING Using the information and vocabulary from the Unit compile an advertisement of: • a private detective • a bodyguard • a detective-training school TASK 8. Render the following text into English using the information and vocabulary from the texts above. Pay special attention to the words and expressions given in bold type: Из истории Скотланд Ярда В 1829 году первые лондонские комиссары полиции Майн и Роуэн организовали главное полицейское управление в помеще- нии дворца Уайтхолл, в котором раньше останавливались шотландс- кие короли при посещении Лондона. Отсюда и происходит название английской уголовной полиции—Скотланд Ярд (шотландский двор). Англия столетиями не имела ни общественных обвинителей, ни настоящей полиции. Поддержание порядка и охрана собственнос- ти считались делом самих граждан. Но никто не хотел этим зани- маться. Англичане предпочитали за деньги нанимать людей для охраны порядка. Каждый мог задержать преступника, привести его к мировому судье и предъявить обвинение. Если обвиняемого осуждали, то задержавший получал вознаграждение, что часто вы- зывало месть сообщников осужденного. В 1828 году в Лондоне существовали целые районы, где обво- ровывали даже днем. На 822 жителя приходился один преступник.
Базовый курс 101 Около 30,000 человек существовали исключительно за счет грабе- жей и воровства. Ситуация была столь серьезна, что министр внут- ренних дел Сэр Роберт Пил решил наконец создать полицию воп- реки общественному мнению. Эта инициатива привела к горячим дебатам в Парламенте. Но в конце концов полиция обеспечила безопасность на улицах Лондона и завоевала доверие общества. Just for Fun The Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD), the FBI, and the CIA are all trying to prove that they are the best at apprehending criminals. The President decides to give them a test. He releases a rabbit into a forest and each of them has to catch it. The CIA goes in. They place animal informants throughout the forest. They question all plant and mineral witnesses. After three months of extensive investigations they conclude that rabbits do not exist. The FBI goes in. After two weeks with no leads they bum the forest, killing everything in it, including the rabbit, and they make no apologies. The LAPD goes in. They come out two hours later with a badly beaten bear. The bear is yelling: “Okay! Okay! I’m a rabbit! I’m a rabbit!” UNIT 6 POLICE TECHNIQUES The UK Forensic Science Service The Forensic Science Service (FSS) serves the administration of justice in England and Wales by providing scientific support in the investigation of crime, and by giving evidence to courts. Its customers include the police, the Crown Prosecution Service, coroners and defence solicitors. In February 1995 the UK government announced that the FSS would merge with the Metropolitan Police Forensic Science Laboratory to form
102 The Best of Just English a single agency serving all police forces in England and Wales through seven regional operational laboratories. Scientific expertise is available on a case-by-case basis to law enforcement agencies and attorneys. The Service provides assistance to home and overseas police forces in the investigation of many crimes, particularly fires where arson is suspected, cases involving DNA profiling and offences involving the use of firearms. The scientists have a wide range of experience in fire-scene examination, including fatal fires in domestic premises, large industrial fires and vehicle fires. DNA profiling is a revolutionary scientific testing process which can positively identify an individual from a specimen of blood, semen, hair roots or tissue. Its application to crime specimens represents the greatest advance in forensic science in decades. The vast potential of DNA profiling is recognised by the police and the legal profession, and its use in criminal investigation has increased. The Forensic Science Service provides advice on firearms and related matters and assistance in the investigation of shooting incidents. When presented with a suspect weapon, the expert is able to establish whether or not it was the weapon used in a crime. Experts are particularly adept in the microscopic examination of spent bullets and cartridge cases. They have access to a world-famous computer-based information systems relating to thousands of firearms. The Service offers training to overseas scientists which is of a general nature or is aimed at specific techniques such as DNA profiling or examination of firearms and documents. Training is provided on note taking, searching, report writing and expert witness appearances in court. Contact
Базовый курс 103 is maintained with other institutions and universities in Britain and other countries. TASK 1. Answer the following questions: 1. What functions does the Forensic Science Service exercise? 2. What are the FSS customers? 3. What assistance does the FSS provide to police forces in criminal investigation? 4. Why is DNA profiling a revolutionary testing process? 5. How does examination of firearms and related matters help investigate crime? 6. What does the course of scientists’ training consist of? TASK 2. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions and use them in sentences of your own: 1. fatal fire in domestic premises 2. industrial fire 3. vehicle fire 4. fire-scene examination 5. investigation of shooting incidents 6. forensic science 7. on a case-by-case basis 8. crime specimen 9. DNA profiling 10. expert witness TASK 3. Render the following newspaper article into English paying special attention to the words and expressions given in bold type. Consult the text in Task 4. Корреспондент одной из московских газет взял интервью у замес- тителя комиссара Скотланд Ярда, который курирует особое подразде- ление по борьбе с терроризмом, а также вопросы национальной безо- пасности и уголовного розыска. — Сколько офицеров служит в лондон- ской полиции? — 28 тысяч. (Для справки: в Москве не- сут службу свыше 70 тысяч сотрудни- ков милиции.) — Сколько вооруженных столкновений происходит в среднем в течение года? — В прошлом году возникло 1621 стол- кновение, стреляли дважды, один раз — со смертельным исходом.
104 The Best of Just English — В состоянии ли главное полицей- ское управление обеспечить быстрое реагирование на вызов полиции? — Мы реагируем на звонки согласно их первостепенной важности. Если есть по- страдавшие, патруль прибывает спус- тя несколько минут после поступления вызова на пульт диспетчерской системы Скотланд Ярда. Это позволяет напра- вить на место происшествия ближайший дежурный патруль. — Вооружена ли Столичная Поли- ция? —Лондонская полиция не вооружена. Однако в городе круглосуточно дейст- вуетспециальный патруль на брониро- ванных высокоскоростных машинах. В состав этого патруля входят 3 вооружен- ных офицера полиции. Полицейские ма- шины оснащены компьютерными дис- плеями, так что информация о личнос- ти подозреваемого сразу же поступает к оперативным работникам. — Какие достижения технического прогресса использует Столичная Поли- ция в расследовании преступлений? — Например, мы используем сканиру- ющий электронный микроскоп для ис- следования улик, найденных на месте преступления, которые впоследствии могут послужить вещественными до- казательствами, таких как отпечатки пальцев, фрагменты кожного и волося- ного покрова. Если не существует спе- циализированной экспертной методики (extensive investigative techniques), в каждом отдельном случае обращаются к гражданским специалистам и прово- дится узкоспециальная работа (to resort to sophisticated job). Полиция также пользуется результатами исследо- ваний ДНК, по этим результатам мож- но получить массу информации. Одна- ко, лабораторные методы исследования очень дороги, поэтому к ним прибега- ют лишь в наиболее сложных случаях. TASK 4. Read the following text and translate the sentences given in bold type in writing: Police Technology in the USA Requests for police services are generally transmitted to headquarters by telephone and then by radio to officers in the field. Police have long operated on the theory that fast response time results in more arrests and less risk or injury to victims. The current trend is toward handling calls by priority, with emergency response reserved for cases involving an injured party or those in which a reasonable chance exists to prevent a crime or make an arrest at the scene. Modem computer-assisted dispatching systems permit automatic selection of the nearest officer in service. In some cities, officers can receive messages displayed on computer terminals in their cars, without voice communication from headquarters. An officer, for
Базовый курс 105 example, can key in the license number of a suspect car and receive an immediate response from the computer as to the status of the car and the owner’s identity. An increasing number of agencies are now using computers to link crime patterns with certain suspects. Fingerprints found at crime scenes can be electronically compared with fingerprint files. In recent years technological advances have been made in such areas as voice identification, use of the scanning electron microscope, and blood testing which is an important tool because only 2 persons in 70,000 have identical blood characteristics. Some of the new laboratory techniques, although highly effective, are extremely expensive, so their use is limited to the most challenging cases. TASK 5. Answer the following questions: 1. What are the current trends in police work in the USA? 2. What cases are handled by priority under the new approach? 3. How do computers assist in police work? 4. What technological advances have been made in law-and-order campaign? 5. Why is blood testing an important tool in crime detection? TASK 6. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. пострадавшая сторона 2. предотвратить преступление 3. осуществить арест на месте преступления 4. отпечатки пальцев 5. быстрое реагирование 6. печатать, вводить с клавиатуры 7. технический прогресс TASK 7. Render the following text into English paying special attention to the words and expressions given in bold type: Большое число расследований уголовных преступлений, ве- дущихся американскими правоохранительными органами, выну- дило ФБР приступить к созданию новой криминалистической ла- боратории. Лаборатория будет оснащена новейшим оборудованием для баллистической, химической, судебно-медицинской и других
106 The Best of Just English видов экспертизы, необходимых для расследования различных пре- ступлений. Лаборатория ФБР, которая находится в Вашингтоне, на протя- жении многих лет остается крупнейшей и лучшей в стране. Однако в последнее время она не справляется с огромным потоком заданий, поступающих не только от головного ведомства, но и из других правоохранительных органов. Необходимость создания новой лаборатории продиктована так- же тем, что ФБР все чаще приходится заниматься расследованием сложнейших дел, связанных с международным терроризмом, орга- низованной преступностью и контрабандой наркотиков. Руководство ФБР планирует создание единой компьютерной базы данных всех правоохранительных органов США, которая бу- дет содержать информацию о преступниках и их сообщниках и ве- щественных доказательствах, собранных в ходе расследований. It’s Interesting to Know Alphonse Bertillion The problem of identifying criminals was made much easier by Bertillion, who, in 1882, invented a system called anthropometry. As head of the identification department of the Paris police he had care fill measurements made of the head, limbs and body of every criminal he could lay his hands on, who could then not get away in the future by giving a false name. Photography was also used for the first time. Many hundreds of criminals were caught in the first years of the system’s operation, but it was soon replaced by fingerprinting. To Bertillion, though, must go the credit for creating the science of human identification. Cyber Justice An artificial-intelligence program called the Electronic Judge is dispensing justice on the streets of Brazilian cities. The program is installed on a laptop carried by a human judge and helps to assess swiftly and methodically witness reports and forensic evidence at the scene of an incident. It then issues on-the-spot fines and can even recommend jail sentences. It is part of a scheme called Justice-on-
Базовый курс 107 Wheels, which is designed to speed up Brazil’s overloaded legal system by dealing immediately with straightforward cases. Most people are happy to have the matters sorted out on the spot, says the program’s creator, who sits in the state’s Supreme Court of Appeals. He adds that the idea is not to replace judges but to make them more efficient. After police alert the rapid justice team to minor accidents, they can be on the scene within 10 minutes. Most cases require only simple questions and no interpretation of the law — the decision-making process is purely logical. The program presents the judge with multiple choice questions, such as “Did the driver stop at the red light?” or “Had the driver been drinking alcohol above the acceptable limit of the law?” These sorts of questions need only yes or no answers. The program gives more than a simple judgement: it also prints out its reasoning. If the human judge disagrees with the decision it can simply be overruled. Some people who have been judged by the program do not realise that they have been tried by software. It could be some time before a similar system takes the place of an English court. “It would have to satisfy the authorities that it was absolutely foolproof first,” says a spokesman for the Lord Chancellor’s office, which oversees courts in England and Wales. But it could be put to use in the U.S., where the discussion is under way to set up a mobile system to resolve disputes over traffic accidents. DEBATE Cybercop: An Alternative to Policeman? Divide into groups — pro and con — and conduct a debate on the necessity of new technologies in police work. Appoint the ‘Chair ’ ofthe debate who will give thefloor to the speakers of both teams. Use the active vocabulary from the Unit.

CHAPTER IV FAIR TRIAL: THE JURY
UNIT 1 ORIGINS OF THE JURY BRAINSTORM • Acquittal I Sentencing • Apprehension • Bringing charges • Bringing in a verdict • Imprisonment • Jury trial • Police custody • Questioning Arrange the legal actions listed above into a logical chain. What is the place of jury trial in this sequence? Early Juries A jury is a body of lay men and women randomly selected to determine facts and to provide a decision in a legal proceeding. Such a body traditionally consists of 12 people and is called a petit jury or trial jury. The exact origin of the jury system is not known; various sources have attributed it to different European peoples who at an early period developed similar methods of trial. The jury is probably of Frankish origin, beginning with inquisition, which had an accusatory and interrogatory function. Trial by jury was brought to England by the Normans in 1066.
Базовый курс 111 In medieval Europe, trials were usually decided by ordeals, in which it was believed God intervened, revealing the wrongdoer and upholding the righteous. In the ordeal by water, for instance, a priest admonished the water not to accept a liar. The person whose oath was being tested was then thrown in. If he floated, his oath was deemed to have been perjured. If he was telling the truth, he might drown but his innocence was clear. In 1215, however, the Catholic Church decided that trial by ordeal was superstition, and priests were forbidden to take part. As a result, a new method of trial was needed, and the jury system emerged. At first the jury was made up of local people who could be expected to know the defendant. A jury was convened only to “say the truth” on the basis of its knowledge of local affairs. The word verdict reflects this early function; the Latin word from which it is derived, veredictum, means “truly said”. In the 14th century the role of the jury finally became that of judgment of evidence. By the 15th century trial byjury became the dominant mode of resolving a legal issue. It was not until centuries later that the jury assumed its modem role of deciding facts on the sole basis of what is heard in court. TASK 1. Find in the text the words that mean the following: • examination of a case before a court of law; • a former method of trial used to determine guilt or innocence by subjecting the accused person to serious physical danger, the result being regarded as a divine judgment; • a solemn appeal to a court to witness one’s determination to speak the truth; • freedom from sin or moral wrong; • a belief or practice resulting from ignorance, fear of the unknown, trust in magic or chance. TASK 2. Answer the following questions: 1. What is a jury? 2. How were cases resolved before jury system emerged? 3. Why was there a need for jury system? 4. What was the function of the first juries? 5. How did the function of the jury change through the centuries? 5 - 9099
112 The Best of Just English TASK 3. Read the following text and write down the Russian equivalents for the words and expressions given in bold type: Ordeal Ordeal is a judgement of the truth of some claim or accusation by various means based on the belief that the outcome will reflect the judgement of supernatural powers and that these powers will ensure the triumph of right. Although fatal consequences often attend an ordeal, its purpose is not punitive. The main types of ordeal are ordeals by divination, physical test, and battle. A Burmese ordeal by divination involves two parties being furnished with candles of equal size and lighted simultaneously; the owner of the candle that outlasts the other is adjudged to have won his cause. Another form of ordeal by divination is the appeal to the corpse for the discovery of its murderer. The ordeal by physical test, particularly by fire or water, is the most common. In Hindu codes a wife may be required to pass through fire to prove her fidelity to a jealous husband; traces of burning would be regarded as proof of guilt. The practice of dunking suspected witches was based on the notion that water, as the medium of baptism, would ‘accept’, or receive, the innocent and ‘reject’ the guilty. Court officials would tie the woman’s feet and hands together and then drop her into some deep water. If she went straight to the bottom and drowned, it was a sure sign that she wasn’t a witch. On the other hand, if she didn’t sink and just bobbed around for a while, the law said she was to be condemned as a witch. In ordeal by combat, or ritual combat, the victor is said to win not by his own strength but because supernatural powers have intervened on the side of the right, as in the duel in the European Middle Ages in which the
Базовый курс 113 ‘judgement of God’ was thought to determine the winner. If still alive after the combat, the loser might be hanged or burned for a criminal offence or have a hand cut off and property confiscated in civil actions. TASK 4. Answer the following questions: 1. What was the purpose of ordeal in early ages? 2. What were the main types of ordeals? 3. What did ordeal by divination consist of? 4. What did ordeal by fire have to prove? 5. In what way was ordeal by water devised? 6. What concept was at the basis of ordeal by combat? It’s Interesting to Know Instructions for Justices of the Peace in the 16th and 17th Century England Relating to Witches 1. Conjuration, or Invocation of any evil Spirit, for any intent, or to be counselling, or aiding thereto, is Felony without benefit of Clergy. 2. To consult, entertain, employ, feed, or reward any evil Spirit, to or for any intent or purpose, is Felony in such offenders, their aiders and counsellors. 3. To take up any dead body, or any part thereof, to be employed or used in any manner of Witchcraft, is Felony in such offenders, their aiders and counsellors. 4. Also to use or practice Witchcrafts, Enchantment, Charm, or Sorcery, whereby any person shall be killed, pinned, or lamed in any part of their body, or to be counselling or aiding thereto, is Felony. By the ancient common law such offenders were to be burned. Now against these Witches, (being the most cruel, revengeful, and bloody of all the rest) the Justices of the Peace may not always expect direct evidence, seeing all their works are the works of darkness, and no witnesses present with them to accuse them. These are the main points to discover and convict these Witches, for they prove fully that those Witches have made a League with the Devil: 1. These Witches have ordinarily a Spirit, which appeareth to them; sometimes in one shape, sometimes in another; as in the shape of a Man, Woman, Boy, Dog, Cat, Foal, Fowl, Hare, Rat, Toad. 5*
114 The Best of Just English And to these Spirits they give names, and they meet together to christen them (as they speak). [...] 10. The Testimony of other Witches, confessing their own Witchcrafts, and witnessing against the suspected, that they have Spirits or Marks; that they have been at their meetings; that they have told them what harm they have done. 11. If the dead body bleeds upon the Witches touching it. [...] 13. The Examination and Confession of the Children (able & fit to answer) or Servants of the Witch. Also whether they have seen her call upon, speak to, or feed any Spirit, or such like, or have heard her foretell of this mishap, or speak of her power to hurt, or of her transportation to this or that place. 14. Their own voluntary Confession (which exceeds all other evidence) of the hurt they have done, or of the giving of their souls to the Devil, and of the Spirits which they have, how many, how they call them, and how they came by them. <_____________________________________________________________________? UNIT 2 JURY DUTY TASK 1. Read the following text and write down Russian equivalents for the words and expressions in bold type: The Fear of Jury Duty For Americans, serving jury duty has always been a dreaded chore. There is plenty of history behind this fear. In colonial days, jurors were locked in a small room with no ventilation and were denied food and water in an attempt to inspire a quick verdict. If the jurors returned with the wrong decisions, they too were charged with a crime. As more and more laws were passed, the rules of evidence expanded and trials became longer, which resulted in more technical and increasingly boring hours for jurors. Trial lawyers have tried to change the boredom by replacing endless hours of testimony with computer animation, video reconstructions, color charts and graphics to better explain the evidence.
Базовый курс 115 The judicial system depends on juries. The United States Constitution guarantees its citizens the right to a trial by jury of their peers. When summoned for jury duty, Americans should look upon it as an opportunity to serve their country, their community, and their fellow citizens. Each year, over 5 million Americans are summoned for jury duty to render verdicts in approximately 120,000 trials. Prospective jurors are chosen at random from voter registration lists. When people are chosen for jury duty, they are often shown a video tape explaining the jury system or given a HANDBOOK ON JURY SERVICE. TASK 2. Answer the following questions: 1. Why have Americans always feared the jury service? 2. In what conditions were jurors kept in colonial days? Why? 3. How has trial procedure changed through the years? 4. Why is the right to a jury trial considered to be so important for the U.S. citizens? The following text comes from a handbook on jury service for U.S. citizens. Jury Service — an Important Job and a Rewarding Experience The right to trial by a jury of our fellow citizens is one of our most important rights and is guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States. By serving on a jury, then, you are helping to guarantee one of our most important freedoms. Your job as a juror is to listen to all the evidence presented at trial and to ‘decide the facts’ — that is, to decide what really happened. The judge, on the other hand, ‘decides the law’ — that is, makes decisions on legal issues that come up during the trial. For example, the judge may have to decide whether you and the other jurors may hear certain evidence or whether one lawyer may ask a witness a certain question. You should not try to decide these legal issues, sometimes you will even be asked to leave the courtroom while they are being decided. Both your job and that of the judge must be done well if our system of trial by jury is to work. In order
116 The Best of Just English to do your job you do not need any special knowledge or ability. It is enough that you keep an open mind, concentrate on the evidence being presented, use your common sense, and be fair and honest. Finally, you should not be influenced by sympathy or prejudice: it is vital that you be impartial with regard to all people and all ideas. Many jurors find that it is exciting to learn about this most important system ‘from the inside’, and challenging to deal fairly and thoroughly with the cases they hear. We hope that you, too, find your experience as a juror to be interesting and satisfying. How You Were Chosen Your name was selected at random from voter registration records and placed on a list of potential jurors. Next, your answers to the Questionnaire for Jurors were evaluated to make sure that you were eligible for jury service and were not exempt from service. To be eligible, you must be over 18 years of age, a citizen of the United States, a resident of the county in which you are to serve as a juror, able to communicate in the English language and if you have been convicted of a felony, you must have had your civil rights restored. People who meet these requirements may be excused from jury service if they have illnesses that would interfere with their ability to do a good job, would suffer great hardship if required to serve, or are unable to serve for some other reason. You are here because you were found to be eligible for jury duty and were able to serve. You are now part of the “jury pool”, the group of people from which trial juries are chosen. TASK 3. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. показания 2. анкета для присяжных 3. списки избирателей 4. предубеждение 5. судебное разбирательство 6. вопросы права 7. фонд, резерв присяжных 8. сохранять объективность в подходе к вопросу, делу 9. освобождать от обязанностей присяжного 10. подходить для службы в жюри присяжных 11. заслушивать показания
Базовый курс 117 12. исключать из состава присяжных 13. восстанавливать в гражданских правах 14. тщательно и беспристрастно рассматривать дело 15. удовлетворять требованиям TASK 4. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions: • fellow citizens • evidence • to decide the law • to decide the facts • courtroom • common sense • prejudice • to be impartial TASK 5. Answer the following questions: 1. What is the job of a juror? 2. What is the job of a judge? 3. What qualities should a good juror have? 4. What requirements should one meet to be eligible for jury service? 5. What are the reasons for a person to be excused from jury service? 6. What is a jury pool? TASK 6. Translate the following text into English, paying special attention to the words and expressions in bold type: Требования, предъявляемые к присяжным заседателям: В список присяжных заседателей не включаются лица • не внесенные в списки избирателей; • не достигшие к моменту составления списков присяжных за- седателей возраста 25 лет; • имеющие неснятую или непогашенную судимость; • признанные судом недееспособными. Из списков присяжных заседателей исключаются: • лица, не владеющие языком, на котором ведется судопроиз- водство в данной местности; • немые, глухие, слепые и другие лица, являющиеся инвали- дами;
118 The Best of Just English • военнослужащие; • судьи, прокуроры, следователи, адвокаты, нотариусы; • священнослужители. TASK 7. The word EVIDENCE has the following meanings in Russian: 1) доказательство evidence at law — судебные доказательства 2) показания evidence for the defence — показания свидетелей защиты 3) улики evidence of crime — улики 4) свидетельство written evidence —письменное свидетельство Match the following English expressions with their Russian equivalents: 1. evidence in the case 2. evidence on oath 3. to give/offer/introduce/ produce evidence 4. to plant evidence 5. to weigh evidence 6. to withhold evidence 7. evidence wrongfully obtained 8. evidence of guilt 9. circumstantial evidence 10. conclusive/ decisive evidence 11. expert evidence 12. false evidence 13. first hand evidence 14. insufficient evidence 15. irrefutable evidence 16. peijured evidence 17. physical evidence а) вещественное доказательство b) давать показания, представить доказа- тельства с) доказательства вины; улики d) доказательства или показания по делу е) доказательства, показания, полученные с нарушением закона f) доказательство из первых рук g) заключение эксперта h) косвенное доказательство i) лжесвидетельство j) ложное доказательство, показание к) недостаточное доказательство 1) неопровержимое доказательство т) окончательное, решающее доказатель- ство п) оценить доказательства о) показания под присягой р) скрыть доказательства q) сфабриковать доказательства
Базовый курс 119 TASK 8. Study the following Juror’s Excusal/Postponement Form. Imagine that you are a juror not willing to perform your jury duty. Fill in the form stating your own reasons: JUROR’S EXCUSAL/POSTPONEMENT FORM You may be disqualified / exempt from Jury Duty for the reasons listed below by checking the appropriate item, or enter your request in the area provided DISQUALIFICATIONS FOR JURY DUTY □ Convicted Felon (Civil Rights not Restored) □ Presently under prosecution for a crime □ Not a resident of County □ Not a citizen of the United States You may be EXEMPT from Jury Duty for reasons listed below □ 70 or older and wish to be temporarily excused □ 70 or older and wish to be permanently excused □ Physically unable (Doctor’s note must be submitted) □ Parent, not employed full time with custody of child under age 6 □ Expectant Mother □ Served on Jury Duty in past 12 months □ Full-time law enforcement officer I request to be excused or postponed because Any request for excusal or postponement must be received at least 7 days prior to your report date. You will be notified by mail regarding the status of your request and postponement date, if applicable. Signature Phone number (Home and Work)
120 The Best of Just English UNIT 3 SELECTION OF THE TRIAL JURY JUROR’S OATH I do solemnly, sincerely and truly declare and affirm that I will faithfully try the defendant and give a true verdict according to the evidence. TASK 1. Read the following text and writedown Russian equivalents for the words and expressions in bold type: The first step in the selection of the trial jury is the selection of a ‘jury panel’. When you are selected for a jury panel you will be directed to report, along with other panel members, to a courtroom in which a case is to be heard once a jury is selected. The judge assigned to that case will tell you about the case and will introduce the lawyers and the people involved in the case. You will also take an oath, by which you promise to answer all questions truthfully. Following this explanation of the case and the taking of the oath, the judge and the lawyers will question you and the other members of the panel to find out if you have any personal interest in it, or any feelings that might make it hard for you to be impartial. This process of questioning is called Voir Dire, a phrase meaning “to speak the truth”. Many of the questions the judge and lawyers ask you during Voir Dire may seem very personal to you, but you should answer them completely and honestly. Remember that the lawyers are not trying to embarrass you, but are trying to make sure that members of the jury do not have opinions or past experiences which might prevent them from making an impartial decision. During Voir Dire the lawyers may ask the judge to excuse you or another member of the panel from sitting on the jury for this particular case. This is called challenging a juror. There are two types of challenges. The first is called a challenge for cause, which means that the lawyer has a specific reason for thinking that the juror would not be able to be impartial. For example, the case may involve the theft of a car. If one of the jurors has had a car stolen and still feels angry or upset about it, the lawyer for the person accused of the theft could ask that the juror be excused for that reason. There is no limit on the number of the panel members that the lawyers may have excused for cause.
Базовый курс 121 The second type of challenge is called ^peremptory challenge, which means that the lawyer does not have to state a reason for asking that the juror be excused. Like challenges for cause, peremptory challenges are designed to allow lawyers to do their best to assure that their clients will have a fair trial. Unlike challenges for cause, however, the number of peremptory challenges is limited. Please try not to take offence if you are excused from serving on a particular jury. The lawyer who challenges you is not suggesting that you lack ability or honesty, merely that there is some doubt about your impartiality because of the circumstances of the particular case and your past experiences. If you are excused, you will either return to the juror waiting area and wait to be called for another panel or will be excused from service, depending on the local procedures in the county in which you live. Those jurors who have not been challenged become the jury for the case. Depending on the kind of case, there will be either six or twelve jurors. The judge may also allow selection of one or more alternate jurors, who will serve if one of the jurors is unable to do so because of illness or some other reason. TASK 2. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. состав присяжных 2. отвод присяжного 3. мотивированный отвод 4. немотивированный отвод 5. присяжные, подобранные для судебного рассмотрения дела 6. присяжный запасного состава 7. принять присягу 8. принять беспристрастное решение 9. указать причину отвода 10. явиться в зал заседания
122 The Best of Just English TASK 3. Answer the following questions: 1. What is the aim of Voir Dire? 2. What does the procedure of Voir Dire consist of? 3. What is challenging a juror? 4. What are the types of challenge? 5. Why is the number of peremptory challenges limited? 6. What aims do lawyers pursue while challenging jurors? 7. What is the number of jurors sitting on a case? 8. Who are alternate jurors? TASK 4. The Russian expression СУДЕБНЫЙ ПРОЦЕСС has the following equivalents in English: 1) litigation — судебный процесс, спор, тяжба civil litigation — судебный процесс по гражданскому делу local litigation — тяжба в местном суде litigation expenses — судебные издержки issue in the litigation — предмет судебного спора 2) lawsuit - судебный процесс, судебное дело, иск, тяжба, пра- вовой спор, судебный спор, судебное разбирательство to be cast in lawsuit — проиграть судебный процесс party to a lawsuit — сторона по делу to file a lawsuit — подать иск 3) suit — судебный процесс, иск, преследование по суду, су- дебное дело, судебная тяжба, судопроизводство to win / to lose a suit — выиграть / проиграть судебный процесс to mount a suit — предъявить иск to press a suit — оказывать давление на ход судебного процесса to bring a suit — возбудить дело, тяжбу 4) trial — судебный процесс, судебное разбирательство, слу- шание дела open(-court) trial — открытый судебный процесс to conduct / hold a trial — вести судебный процесс staged trial — инсценированный судебный процесс trial by jury — рассмотрение дела с участием присяжных to bring to trial / to put (up)on trial / to place on trial — предать суду
Базовый курс 123 to face trial — предстать перед судом to stand trial — отвечать перед судом civil trial — гражданское судопроизводство criminal trial — уголовное судопроизводство preliminary trial — предварительное слушание дела case for trial/ trial case — дело, подлежащее судебному рассмот- рению case on trial — дело на стадии судебного рассмотрения delay in trial — задержка судебного разбирательства, отсрочка судебного разбирательства trial docket / trial list — список дел к слушанию investigation at the trial — судебное следствие party to a trial — сторона в процессе; участник процесса 5) cause — судебный процесс, судебное дело, тяжба legal cause — судебное дело, законное основание major / minor cause — дело о тяжком / малозначительном право- нарушении costs in the cause — судебные издержки, издержки в процессе cause list — список дел к слушанию side in a cause — сторона по делу 6) controversy — гражданский судебный процесс, правовой спор, судебный спор legal controversy — правовой спор; судебный спор to decide a controversy — решить спор party in controversy — сторона в судебном споре 7) process — судебный процесс, процедура, порядок, произ- водство дел, судопроизводство, процессуальные нормы arrest process — приказ суда об аресте 8) proceeding(s) — судебный процесс, рассмотрение дела в суде, судебное разбирательство, судебная процедура, произ- водство по делу, судопроизводство to take criminal proceeding(s) — возбудить уголовное преследо- вание civil proceeding(s) — гражданское производство criminal proceeding(s) — уголовное судопроизводство forfeiture proceeding(s) — процедура конфискации
124 The Best of Just English Find in the list above the English equivalents for the following Russian expressions: 1. судебные издержки 2. сторона по делу 3. тяжба 4. проиграть / выиграть судебный процесс 5. возбудить дело 6. предъявить иск TASK 5. Translate the following text into English, paying special attention to the words and expressions in bold type: . Формирование скамьи присяжных заседателей включает: • составление списков присяжных заседателей; • приглашение их в судебное заседание; • выявление судьей объективности и непредвзятости при рас- смотрении данного дела у приглашенных в суд присяжных заседате- лей; • использование сторонами права на мотивированный и немо- тивированный отвод присяжных заседателей. В результате остаются 12 основных и 2 запасных присяжных заседателя. От исполнения обязанностей присяжного заседателя по конкрет- ному делу председательствующий судья освобождает всякого, чья объективность вызывает обоснованные сомнения вследствие ока- занного на это лицо незаконного воздействия, наличия у него пред- взятого мнения, знания им обстоятельств дела из непроцессуальных источников, а также по другим причинам. ПРИСЯГА После того, как кол- легия присяжных заседа- телей сформирована и из- бран их старшина, пред- седательствующий судья приводит присяжных за- седателей к присяге. “Клянусь исполнять свои обязанности че- стно и беспристрастно, принимать во вни- мание все рассмотренные в суде доказа- тельства, доводы, обстоятельства дела и ничего, кроме них, разрешать дело по сво- ему внутреннему убеждению и совести, как подобает свободному гражданину и спра- ведливому человеку”. (Россия)
Базовый курс 125 TASK 6. Complete the following text using the words from the box: The Jury in Britain criminal offence; acquitted; challenge; civil cases; convicted; disqualified; liable for; ownership of property; randomly; right of appeal; evidence; judiciary; verdict; unanimous; undertake Trial by jury is an ancient and important feature of English justice. Although it has declined in___________________(except for libel and fraud), it is the main element in criminal trials in the crown court. Jury membership was once linked to the____________________, which resulted in male and middle-class dominance. But now most categories of British residents are obliged to jury service when summoned. Before the start of a criminal trial in the crown court, 12 jurors are chosen from a list of some 30 names selected from local electoral registers. They listen to the_______at the trial and give their verdict on the facts, after having been isolated in a separate room for their deliberations. In England, Wales and Northern Ireland the may be ‘guilty’ or ‘not guilty’, the latter resulting in acquittal. Until 1967 the verdict had to be__________. But now the judge will accept a majority verdict after the jury has deliberated for more than two hours provided that, in the normal jury of 12 people, there are no more than two dissenters. In Scotland the jury’s verdict may be ‘guilty’, ‘not guilty’ or ‘not proven’; the accused is_____________if either of the last two verdicts is given. As a general rule no one may be without corroborated evidence from at least two sources. If the jury acquits the defendant, the prosecution has no _________and the defendant cannot be tried again for the same offence. A jury is independent of the_____________. Any attempt to interfere with a jury is a_______________. Potential jurors are put on a panel before the start of the trial. In England and Wales the prosecution and the defence may______________individual jurors on the panel, giving reasons for doing so. In Scotland the prosecution or defence may challenge up to three jurors without reason. In Northern Ireland each defendant has the right to challenge up to 12 potential jurors without giving a reason. People between the ages of 18 and 70 (65 in Scotland) whose names appear on the electoral register, with certain exceptions, are
126 The Best of Just English jury service and their names are chosen at random. Ineligible people include, for example, judges and people who have within the previous ten years been members of the legal profession or the police, prison or probation services. People convicted of certain offences within the previous ten years cannot serve on a jury. Anyone who has received a prison sentence of five years or more is for life. Just for Fun Jury is a group of twelve men who, having lied to the judge about their hearing, health, and business engagements, have failed to fool him. Henry Lewis Mencken UNIT 4 IN THE COURTROOM TASK 1. Read the following text and write down Russian equivalents for the words and expressions in bold type: The number of the days you work as a juror and your working hours depend on the jury selection system in the county in which you live. Working hours may also be varied by the judge to accommodate witnesses coming from out of town or for other reasons. Regardless of the length of your working day, one thing that may strike you is the amount of waiting. For example, you may have to wait a long while before you are called for a jury panel. You also may be kept waiting in the jury room during trial while the judge and the lawyers settle a question of law that has come up. This waiting may seem like a waste of time to you and also may make it seem as if the court system isn’t working very well. In reality, however, there are good reasons for the waiting you do both before and during trial. Your having to wait before trial is important for the efficient operation of the system. Because there are many cases to be heard and because trials are expensive, judges encourage people to come to an agreement in their case before trial. These agreements, called settlements, can occur at any time, even a few minutes before the trial is scheduled to
Базовый курс 127 begin. This means that it is impossible to know exactly how many trials there will be on a particular day or when they will start. Jurors are kept waiting, therefore, so that they are immediately available for the next case that goes to trial. Your waiting during trial helps assure the fairness of the proceedings. You will remember that the jurors decide the facts and that the judge decides the law. If you are sent out of the courtroom during trial, it is probably because a legal issue has come up that must be decided before more evidence can be presented to you. You are sent out because the judge decides that you should not hear the discussion about the law, because it might interfere with your ability to decide the facts in an impartial way. Sometimes the judge will explain why you were sent out, but sometimes he may not be able to do so. Please be assured, however, that these delays during trial, explained or not, are important to the fairness of the trial. In any case, judges and personnel do whatever they can to minimize the waiting before and during trial. Your understanding is appreciated. TASK 2. Answer the following questions: 1. What does a juror’s working day depend on? 2. What is a settlement? 3. When and why are jurors sent out of the courtroom during trial? Courtroom Personnel In addition to the lawyers and the judge, three other people will play an important role in the trial. The court reporter, who sits close to the witnesses and the judge, puts down every word that is spoken during the trial and also may record the proceedings on tape. The clerk, who sits right below the judge, keeps track of all documents and exhibits and notes down important events in the trial. The bailiff helps to keep the trial running smoothly. The jury is in the custody of the bailiff, who sees to the jurors comfort and convenience and helps them if they are having any problems related to jury service. TASK 3. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. судебный секретарь 2. вещественное доказательство 3. вести магнитофонную запись
128 The Best of Just English 4. судебный пристав 5. протоколист суда TASK 4. Look at the picture of an American courtroom. Match the numbers in the picture with the words below: □ jury □ court reporter □ judge □ defendant □ defence attorney □ witness □ witness stand □ prosecuting attorney □ bailiff □ jury box □ judge’s bench □ courtroom TASK 5. Read the letter of the inmate of San Quentin Prison (USA). Using the picture above, explain why in his opinion the courtroom layout is unfavourable for the defendant: A View From Behind Bars I want to talk about the way that courtrooms are laid out. I think that by their design, it already puts the defendant at a disadvantage when he
Базовый курс 129 goes to trial. Maybe you think that it is ridiculous to claim that the way a courtroom is laid out has an impact on a trial, but let me explain. When you walk into a courtroom in California, the floorplan is basically the same as any other. Since most people have seen at least one trial on TV, you can probably visualize what I am describing. If you sit in the jury box and look out over the courtroom, here is what you will see. Closest to the jury is a witness stand where the witnesses sit when they testify. On the other side of the witness stand is the Judge’s bench sitting high above everything else, so as to give an air of authority. Facing the Bench and witness stand are the tables where the prosecutor and defence sit during the course of the trial. In between the prosecutor and defence table is a podium that the lawyers stand at when they address the court and the jury. Sitting closest to the jury box is always the prosecutor’s table, then the podium, and on the other side of that is the defence table. The person on trial is as far away from the jury as it is possible. When I was on trial, I couldn’t even see half of the jury, unless I leaned out over the table to look at them. So, this set-up seems to make the person on trial distant, and not even a real part of the proceedings, which in my opinion, makes it easier for the jury to depersonalize you when you are on trial. Meanwhile, the prosecutor is damned near sitting in the jury’s lap all through the trial and the jury has the tendency to relate with the prosecutor a lot easier. This might sound like a trivial thing, but consider this. A witness for the defence is on the witness stand and giving his or her testimony, but all through the witness’s testimony, the prosecutor is sitting right next to the jury and reacting to everything the witness says by facial expressions and body language. And, if you are saying that this doesn’t have an impact on a jury, then you are very naive... or a prosecutor. TASK 6. Translate the following definitions in writing: CASE — any proceeding, action, cause, lawsuit or controversy initiated through the court system by filing a complaint, petition or information. WITNESS — a person who testifies under oath in court regarding what was seen, heard or otherwise observed. TRIAL — the presentation of evidence in court to a trier of facts who applies the applicable law to those facts and then decides the case. EVIDENCE — a form of proof legally presented at a trial through witnesses, records, documents, etc.
130 The Best of Just English TASK 7. Read the text carefully and comment on the advice given to jurors. Be ready to explain the relevance of each item: Do’s and Don’ts for Jurors During trial 1. DO arrive on time. The trial can not proceed until all jurors are present. Do return to the courtroom promptly after breaks and lunch. 2. DO pay close attention to witnesses. Concentrate both on what the witnesses say and on their manner while testifying. If you cannot hear what is being said, raise your hand and let the judge know. 3. DO keep an open mind all through the trial. DON’T form an opinion on the case until you and the other jurors have conducted your deliberations. Remember that if you make up your mind while listening to one witness’s testimony, you may not be able to consider fully and fairly the testimony that comes later. 4. DO listen carefully to the instructions read by the judge immediately before the jury begins its deliberations. Remember that it is your duty to accept what the judge says about the law to be applied to the case you have heard. DON’T ignore the judge’s instructions because you disagree about what the law is or ought to be. 5. DON’T talk about the case with anyone while the trial is going on, not even with other jurors. It is equally important that you do not allow other people to talk about the case in your presence, even a family member. 6. DON’T talk to the lawyers, parties, or witnesses about anything. These people are not permitted to talk to jurors and may appear to ignore you outside the courtroom. Remember that they are not trying to be rude: they are merely trying to avoid giving the impression that something unfair is going on. 7. DON’T try to discover evidence x on your own. For ( example, never go to l' <• the scene of any event that is part of the case you are 1 hearing. Remember J ) that cases must be decided only on the v щ basis of evidence а л ,л a ' - admitted in court. r\ /1 • Л Л -Л--А A A I
Базовый курс 131 8. DON’T let yourself get any information about the case from newspapers, television, radio, or any other source. Remember that news reports do not always give accurate or complete information. Even if the news about the trial is accurate, it cannot substitute for your own impressions about the case. If you should accidentally hear outside information about the case during trial, tell the bailiff about it in private. 9. DON’T express your opinion about the case to other jurors until deliberations begin. A person who has expressed an opinion tends to pay attention only to evidence that supports it and to ignore evidence that points the other way. During deliberations 1. DO consult with the other jurors before making up your mind about a verdict. Each juror must make up his or her own mind, but only after impartial group consideration of the evidence. 2. DO reason out differences of opinion between jurors by means of a complete and fair discussion of the evidence and of the judge’s instructions. DON’T lose your temper, try to bully other jurors, or refuse to listen to the opinions of other jurors. 3. DO reconsider your views in the light of your deliberations, and change them if you have become convinced they are wrong. DON’T change your convictions about the importance or effect of evidence, however, just because other jurors disagree with you or so that the jury can decide on a verdict. 4. DON’T play cards, read, or engage in any other diversion. 5. DON’T mark or write on exhibits or otherwise change or injure them. 6. DON’T cast lots or otherwise arrive at your verdict by chance, or the verdict will be illegal. 7. DON’T talk to anyone about your deliberations or about the verdict until the judge discharges the jury. After discharge you may discuss the verdict and the deliberations with anyone to whom you wish to speak. DON’T feel obligated to do so; no juror can be forced to talk without a court order. DO be careful about what you say to others. You should not say or write anything that you would not be willing to state under oath. TASK 8. Translate the following into English: Присяжный заседатель не должен: • отлучаться из зала судебного заседания во время слушания дела;
132 The Best of Just English • общаться по делу с лицами, не входящими в состав суда, без разрешения председательствующего; • собирать сведения по делу вне судебного заседания. Just for Fun A jury consists of twelve persons chosen to decide who has the better lawyer. * * * “You seem to be in some distress,” said the judge to the witness. “Is anything wrong?” “Well, your Honour,” said the witness, “I swore to tell the truth and nothing but the truth, but every time I try, some lawyer objects!” * * * A man had been convicted of theft on circumstantial evidence. When the case was sent for appeal, he revealed to his lawyer that he had been in prison at the time of the crime committed. “Good Heavens, man!” said the lawyer. “Why on earth didn’t you reveal that fact at the trial?” “Well,” said the man, “I thought it might prejudice the jury against me.” * * * A man accused of stealing a watch was acquitted on insufficient evidence. Outside the courtroom he approached his lawyer and said, “What does that mean — acquitted?” “It means,” said the lawyer, “that the court has found you innocent. You are free to go.” “Does it mean I can keep the watch?” asked the client. * * * First juror: “We shouldn’t be here very long. One look at those two fellows convinces me that they are guilty.” Second juror: “Not so loud, you fool! That’s counsel for the prosecution and counsel for the defence!”
Базовый курс 133 UNIT 5 KINDS OF CASES TASK 1. Read thefollowing text and write down Russian equivalents for the words and expressions in bold type: As a juror, you may sit on a criminal case, a civil case, or both. Civil Cases Civil cases are usually disputes between or among private citizens, corporations, governments, government agencies, and other organizations. Most often, the party bringing the suit is asking for money damages for some wrong that has been done. For example, a tenant may sue a landlord for failure to fix a leaky roof, or a landlord may sue a tenant for failure to pay rent. People who have been injured may sue a person or a company they feel is responsible for the injury. The party bringing the suit is called the plaintiff; the party being sued is called the defendant. There may be many plaintiffs or many defendants in the same case. The plaintiff starts the lawsuit by filing a paper called a complaint, in which the case against the defendant is stated. The next paper filed is usually the answer, in which the defendant disputes what the plaintiff has said in the complaint. The defendant may also feel that there has been a wrong committed by the plaintiff, in which case a counterclaim will be filed along with the answer. It is up to the plaintiff to prove the case against the defendant. In each civil case the judge tells the jury the extent to which the plaintiff must prove the case. This is called the plaintiffs burden of proof, a burden that the plaintiff must meet in order to win. In most civil cases the plaintiffs burden is to prove the case by a preponderance of evidence, that is, that the plaintiffs version of what happened in the case is more probably true than not true. Jury verdicts do not need to be unanimous in civil cases. Only ten jurors need to agree upon a verdict if there arc 12 jurors: five must agree if there are six jurors. In Great Britain in civil cases, the person suing was, until 1999, known as the PLAINTIFF, but is now officially called the CLAIMANT, and the person sued is the DEFENDANT.
134 The Best of Just English Criminal Cases A criminal case is brought by the state or by a city or county against a person or persons accused of having committed a crime. The state, city, or county is called the plaintiff; the accused person is called the defendant. The charge against the defendant is called an information or a complaint. The defendant has pleaded not guilty and you should presume the defendant’s innocence throughout the entire trial unless the plaintiff proves the defendant guilty. The plaintiffs burden of proof is greater in a criminal case than in a civil case. In each criminal case you hear the judge will tell you all the elements of the crime that the plaintiff must prove; the plaintiff must prove each of these elements beyond reasonable doubt before the defendant can be found guilty. In criminal cases the verdict must be unanimous, that is, all jurors must agree that the defendant is guilty in order to overcome the presumption of innocence. TASK 2. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. заявление об обвинении 2. элемент (состава) преступления 3. презумпция невиновности 4. показания (2) 5. истец 6. судебное разбирательство (3) 7. частные лица 8. денежная компенсация ущерба 9. единогласное решение присяжных 10. наличие более веских доказательств 11. письменные объяснения, возражения ответчика по делу 12. ответчик 13. встречный иск 14. бремя доказывания 15. ответственность за ущерб 16. подать иск /возбудить дело 17. заслушать показания 18. заявить о своей невиновности TASK 3. Translate the following definitions into Russian: DEFENDANT — (crim.) person charged with a crime; (civ.) person or entity against whom a civil action is brought.
Базовый курс 135 ACTION — proceeding taken in court synonymous to case, suit, lawsuit PREPONDERANCE OF EVIDENCE means that the weight of evidence presented by one side is more convincing to the trier of facts than the evidence presented by the opposing side. PLAINTIFF — the party who begins an action, complains or sues. COUNTERCLAIM — claim presented by a defendant in opposition to the claim of the plaintiff. COMPLAINT — (crim.) formal written charge that a person has committed a criminal offence; (civ.) initial document filed by a plaintiff which starts the claim against the defendant. TASK 4. Match the following English expressions with their Russian equivalents: 1) evidence for the plaintiff 2) judgement for the plaintiff а) вызывать истца в суд b) выступать в суде в качестве адвоката истца 3) plaintiffs claim 4) to appear for the plaintiff 5) to call the plaintiff с) доказательства в пользу истца d) исковое требование е) свидетель, выставленный истцом 6) witness by the plaintiff f) судебное решение в пользу истца TASK 5. The word DEFENDANT has the following meanings in Russian: 1)ответчик civil defendant — ответчик 2) обвиняемый bailed defendant — обвиняемый или подсудимый, освобождён- ный (из-под стражи) под залог 3) подсудимый judgement for the defendant — судебное решение в пользу ответ- чика или подсудимого 4) подзащитный representation of defendant — представительство интересов под- защитного или подсудимого
136 The Best of Just English Match the following English expressions with their Russian equivalents: 1) convicted defendant а) подсудимый, содержащийся под стражей 2) defendant in custody b) осуждённый 3) defendant’s record с) досье подсудимого 4) defendant’s story d) свидетель, выставленный ответчиком / подсудимым 5) defendant’s witness е) версия, выдвинутая обвиняемым TASK 6. Answer the following questions: 1. What is a civil easel 2. Who is a plaintiff! 3. Who is a defendant! 4. What is a complaint? 5. What is an answer? 6. What is a counterclaim? 7. What is a burden ofproof! 8. What is a criminal case? 9. What is preponderance of evidence? 10. How many jurors are necessary to agree upon the verdict in a criminal case? 11. Who is the plaintiff in a criminal case? 12. What is meant by the presumption of innocence? TASK 7. Study the article below and decide the following: 1. What are the names of the plaintiff and the defendant in the lawsuit? 2. What was the issue at the heart of the dispute? 3. What were the claims of both parties? 4. How did the Random House editor describe the manuscript? 5. How did Joan Collins’s attorney build up the defence? 6. What was the jury’s verdict? Joan Collins Has Starring Role in Lawsuit Reuter and Associated Press NEW YORK British actress Joan Collins made her debut Tuesday in a New York courtroom, battling publishing giant Random House over a multimillion-dollar book contract. Random House is suing Collins, demanding the return of a $ 1.2-million advance paid to her for manuscripts it claims were unfinished
Базовый курс 137 and unpublishable. Collins, best known for playing the scheming Alexis Carrington in the television series Dynasty, has countersued for $3.6 million she claims the publishing house still owes her. Collins said she “felt completely shattered and let down” by the lawsuit. “It has seriously upset my writing career and my reputation”, she said. The dispute centered on a simple question: what is a completed manuscript? Delivering the opening argument for Random House, attorney Robert Callagy said Collins had not met the terms of her contract and had to return the advance money. “Miss Collins should be treated like any other person”, Callagy said. “If you sign the contract, you must perform”. Former Random House editor Joni Evans testified that when she first read Collins’ manuscript, she felt “alarmed”. “It just wasn’t working in any shape or form”, said Evans, now a literary agent. “It was no good. It wasn’t grounded in reality. It was dull, primitive and rough. It was cliched in plot”. Collins’s attorney, Kenneth David Burrows, argued that the actress had submitted two complete manuscripts, A Ruling Passion, written at her home in France, and a second manuscript with the working title Hell Hath No Fury. Thus she had turned in the required number of words and therefore had complied with the contract. He also said Random House should have provided her with editing and advice but instead it was trying to avoid meeting its obligations. He argued earlier that under the initial book deal she was guaranteed the money even if the publisher rejected the book. Verdict. The jury decided that Collins had completed one manuscript in compliance with her contract. But Random House did not have to pay her for the second manuscript because it was merely a rehashing of the first one and not a separate piece of work. The verdict meant Collins could keep the advance and collect more from Random House, though how much more remained in dispute. ROLE-PLAY Is Justice Done? Role-play the Joan Collins trial. STEP 1. Write down the speeches for the opening and closing arguments of the parties’ attorneys. STEP 2. Role-play the trial: ‘the lawyers’ deliver their speeches; ‘the defendant ’ testifies in court. STEP 3. The rest of the group — thejurors — deliberate the evidence and bring in a verdict of their own.
138 The Best of Just English It’s Interesting to Know Curious Wills • When Margaret Montgomery of Chicago died, she left her five cats and a $ 15,000 trust fund for their care to a former employee, William Fields. The will stipulated that Fields was to use the trust income solely for the cats’ care and feeding, including such delicacies as pot roast meat. If, however, he outlived all the cats, Fields would inherit the trust principal. Nine years later the last cat, Fat Nose, died at 20, and Fields, 79, was $10,000 richer. • Charles Vance Millar, a Canadian lawyer and financier who died a bachelor, bequeathed the bulk of his fortune to whichever Toronto women gave birth to the largest number of children in the 10 years after his death. Four women eventually tied in the ‘stork derby’ that followed the publication of his will. Each had 9 children, and they shared between them $750,000. A fifth woman who had 10 children was ruled out because 5 were illegitimate. • One of the world’s shortest wills was left by an Englishman named Dickens. Contested in 1906 but upheld by the courts, it read simply: “All for mother”. • A 19th-century London tavernkeeper left his property to his wife on the condition that every year, on the anniversary of his death, she would walk barefoot to the local market, hold up a lighted candle, and confess aloud how she had nagged him. The theme of the confession was that if her tongue had been shorter, her husband’s days would have been longer. If she failed to keep the appointment, she was to receive no more than 20 pounds a year, just enough to live on. Whether the wife decided to take the bigger bequest or spare herself humiliation is not known.
Базовый курс 139 UNIT 6 STEPS OF THE TRIAL TASK I. Read the following text and write down Russian equivalents for the words and expressions in bold type: What Happens during the Trial Events in a trial usually happen in a particular order, though the order may be changed by the judge. The usual order of events is set out below. Step 1: Selection of the Jury. Step 2: Opening Statements. The lawyers for each side will discuss their views of the case that you are to hear and will also present a general picture of what they intend to prove about the case. What the lawyers say in their opening statements is not evidence and, therefore, does not help prove their cases. Step 3: Presentation of Evidence. Allparties are entitled to present evidence. The testimony of witnesses who testify at trial is evidence. Evidence may also take the form of physical exhibits, such as a gun or a photograph. On occasion, the written testimony of people not able to attend the trial may also be evidence in the cases you will hear. Many things you will see and hear during the trial are not evidence. For example, what the lawyers say in their opening and closing statements is not evidence. Physical exhibits offered by the lawyers, but not admitted by the judge, are also to be disregarded, as is testimony that the judge orders stricken off the record. Many times during the trial the lawyers may make objections to evidence presented by the other side or to questions asked by the other lawyer. Lawyers are allowed to object to these things when they consider them improper under the laws of evidence. It is up to the judge to decide whether each objection was valid or invalid, and whether, therefore, the evidence can be admitted or the question allowed. If the objection was valid, the judge will sustain the objection. If the objection was not valid, the judge will overrule the objection. These rulings do not reflect the judge’s opinion of the case or whether the judge favours or does not favour the evidence or the question to which there has been an objection.
140 The Best of Just English It is your duty as a juror to decide the weight or importance of evidence or testimony allowed by the judge. You are also the sole judge of the credibility of witnesses, that is, of whether their testimony is believable. In considering credibility, you may take into account the witnesses’ opportunity and ability to observe the events about which they are testifying, their memory and manner while testifying, the reasonableness of their testimony when considered in the light of all the other evidence in the case, their possible bias or prejudice, and any other factors that bear on the believability of the testimony or on the importance to be given that testimony. Step 4: Closing Arguments. The lawyers in the closing arguments summarize the case from their point of view. They may discuss the evidence that has been presented or comment on the credibility of witnesses. The lawyers may also discuss any of the judge’s instructions that they feel are of special importance to their case. These arguments are not evidence. Step 5: The Instructions. The role of the jury in American jurisprudence is 1) to decide the facts - what happened; 2) to apply to those facts the law as instructed by the judge; and 3) from that application, to determine whether it has been proved, beyond reasonable doubt, that the crimes charged were committed and that the defendant committed them. In order to permit the jury to perform that role, the judge must instruct the jury on the law that is to be applied in the deliberations on a verdict. Instructions can be given at four different times during the case - preliminary instructions given at the beginning of the case, specific instructions given during the case, final instructions given at the end of the case, and instructions that respond to questions submitted by the jury during their deliberations. Traditionally, the judge’s final instructions on the law were given at the close of evidence and after lawyers have made their closing arguments. Under more current rules, judges are permitted, and in some court systems, required, to give their instructions prior to closing arguments. All documents or physical objects that have been received into evidence will also be sent to the jury room. In most, if not all, courts, the judge reads the instructions to the jury and they are recorded, either electronically or by a court stenographer. In some courts, the judge, in addition, may give the jury a written copy to take to the jury room. Step 6: Jury Deliberation. The jury retires to the jury room to conduct the deliberations on the verdict in the case they have just heard. The jury first elects a foreman who will see to it that discussion is conducted in a sensible and orderly fashion, that all issues are fully and fairly discussed, and that every juror is given a fair chance to participate.
Базовый курс 141 When a verdict has been reached, the foreman signs it and informs the bailiff. The jury returns to the courtroom, where the foreman presents the verdict. The judge then discharges the jury from the case. TASK 2. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. вступительная речь 2. заключительная речь 3. надёжность свидетеля 4. зачитать вердикт 5. правомерный протест 6. принять, поддержать протест 7. вычеркнуть из протокола 8. удалиться в комнату для совещаний присяжных 9. совещание присяжных 10. старшина присяжных 11. свидетельские показания 12. отклонить протест TASK 3. Answer the following questions: 1. What are the steps of a trial? 2. What can be considered evidenced 3. What is a physical exhibit! 4. What are objections! 5. When can objections be made? 6. Who can sustain or overrule an objection! 7. What does the judge say in the instructions! 8. Who presents closing arguments! 9. What happens during/ury deliberations! TASK 4. Render the following text into English paying special attention to the words and expressions given in bold type: Прения сторон Прежде чем исследованные в предшествующей стадии судеб- ного разбирательства материалы дела будут анализироваться в сове- щании присяжных, они обсуждаются в процессе судебных прений, где государственный обвинитель и защитник, используя профес-
142 The Best of Just English сиональные знания и навыки, восстанавливают связь между доказа- тельствами, позволяя “судьям от общества” сделать свободный вы- бор между обвинением и оправданием подсудимого. Позиции обвинения и защиты в суде присяжных строятся не только на основе принципа состязательности, но и на основе принци- па презумпции невиновности: невиновность подсудимого предпо- лагается, а виновность доказывается обвинителем. Судья вправе прервать речь, возражение или замечание сторо- ны, если в них содержатся: • сведения, не имеющие прямого отношения к делу; • обстоятельства, оскорбительные для чьей-либо чести и досто- инства; • данные, не проверенные в ходе судебного следствия; • ссылки на исключенные из дела доказательства; • сведения о прежней судимости обвиняемого; • иные обстоятельства, влияющие на объективность присяж- ных. Судья в своем напутственном слове объясняет присяжным за- седателям, что при вынесении вердикта они должны: • руководствоваться здравым смыслом; • руководствоваться принципом презумпции невиновности, согласно которому подсудимый не обязан доказывать свою не- виновность: бремя доказывания вины подсудимого лежит на государственном обвинителе; • оценивать исследованные в суде доказательства (показания подсудимого, потерпевшего, свидетелей, заключения экспер- тов и др.) в их совокупности, согласовывая их одно с другим; • не принимать во внимание доказательства, вычеркнутые из протокола; • не воспринимать как доказательства доводы, прозвучавшие в речах сторон. TASK 5. Translate the following text into Russian: Verdict Verdict, in law, is the pronouncement of the jury upon matters of fact submitted to them for deliberation and determination. In civil cases, verdicts may be either general or special. A general verdict is one in which the jury pronounces generally upon all the issues, in favor of either the plaintiff or the defendant. A special verdict is one in which the jury reviews the facts,
Базовый курс 143 but leaves to the court any decisions on questions of law arising from those facts. As a rule, however, special verdicts are not applicable to criminal cases, and in most instances the jury renders a general verdict of‘guilty’ or ‘not guilty.’ Generally, the jury’s verdict must be unanimous. In a number of states, however, the condition of unanimity has been modified, and verdicts can consequently be rendered by a designated majority of the jury. All jury members must be present in court when the verdict is given. In criminal cases a verdict of acquittal is conclusive upon the prosecution (the state), thus precluding double jeopardy, but the defendant may be tried again in the event the jury cannot reach a decision. The defendant must be present when the verdict is rendered. TASK 6. Match the following English expressions with their Russian equivalents: 1) final verdict 2) general verdict 3) special verdict 4) to attain/reach/retum/bring in a verdict 5) unanimous verdict 6) verdict of acquittal 7) verdict of conviction 8) verdict of guilty 9) verdict of non-guilty 10) wrong verdict 11) to agree to/upon a verdict а)вердикт о виновности b)вердикт о невиновности с) вердикт об оправдании d) вердикт об осуждении е) вынести вердикт f) генеральный вердикт, вердикт по существу дела g) окончательный вердикт h) ошибочный вердикт i) прийти к соглашению относи- тельно вердикта j) вердикт, вынесенный едино- гласно к) специальный вердикт (решение присяжными частного вопроса) TASK 7. Render the following text into English paying special attention to the words and expressions given in bold type: Вердиктом является решение коллегии присяжных заседате- лей по поставленным перед ней вопросам, включая основной вопрос о виновности подсудимого. Присяжные выносят вердикт • без постороннего влияния, удалившись в совещательную ком- нату, 6 — 9099
144 The Best of Just English • открытым голосованием, причем никто не вправе воздержать- ся от принятия решения, • путем единогласного решения, или большинством голосов, • ответы даются по каждому вопросу отдельно. Руководит совещанием присяжных старшина, который после- довательно ставит на обсуждение подлежащие разрешению воп- росы, проводит голосование, ведет подсчет голосов. TASK 8. Revise your knowledge of the work of juries. Fill in the gaps in the following sentences: 1. A juror should keep an open_____________all through the trial. 2. You become a potential juror after your name is selected___________from voters registration___________ . 3. A crime of graver nature than a misdemeanour is a_____________.4. To___________somebody means to find a person not guilty in a trial. 5. Civil cases are usually disputes between or among______________, corporations or other organizations. 6.The______ of jury doesn’t need to be in civil cases. 7.The ____________keeps track of all documents and exhibits in trial being the judge’s assistant. 8. The job of a juror is to listen to and to decide. 9. One who is engaged in a lawsuit is called a _________. 10. Process by which a lawyer questions a witness called to testify by the other side is__________.11. “______________” is a phrase meaning “to speak the truth”. 12. A juror should not be influenced by sympathy or ____________.13. A juror should not express his______________to other jurors before________________________________________________begin. 14. Formal accusation of having committed a criminal offence is a__________. 15. To be a good juror you should use your_______________and be______________. 16. The third stage of a trial is_________________. 17. When a___________has been reached the judge the jury from the case. 18. A member of jury panel must____________an________promising to answer all questions truthfully. 19. To be eligible, you must: be______________,_______________, able to, and if you__________________ever______________________, you must have your____________________________. 20. Compromise agreement by opposing parties, eliminating the need for the judge to resolve the controversy is called___________. 21. Trier of facts is a______or, in a non-jury trial — a______________. 22. People who don’t meet certain ____________may be____________from jury service. 23. Lawyers for each side are allowed to___________when they consider something done improper under the________of evidence. 24. Attorney who represents the defendant is a. 25.is any statement made by a
Базовый курс 145 witness under_____in legal proceedings. 26._________________means that the lawyer doesn’t have to state a________for asking the juror to be excused. 27. The party bringing the suit is called a. 28. The fifth step of a trial is called________________, when the lawyers __________the case from their______of view. 29. The lawsuit is started by filing a paper called a_________. 30. The defendant’s innocence is __________unless he is proved______. 31. It is up to the judge to decide whether each_______________________is valid or_. 32. Following the_ of evidence, the judge gives_________to the jurors on the laws that are to guide them in their___on a______. 33. A________case is brought by the state or the city against a person or persons accused of a crime. 34. In_____cases people who have been______may sue a person or a company they feel is responsible for______. 35. If the defendant has_______not guilty, the prosecution must prove his guilt to overcome the___________________. 36. The________________elected by the jury should provide that__________is conducted in orderly fashion. 37._________ ______is a request by a party to excuse a specific juror for some reason. 38. The___________in trial decides the law, i.e. makes decisions on legal . 39.Most often in civil cases the party bringing the is asking for money. UNIT 7 THE VALUE OF JURIES Falling Bastion? How valuable is the jury in modem times? This is a very controversial question. On the one hand the jury has much ancient history behind it (though some scholars have argued it is more mythology than true history) as a bastion of the liberty of the subject against repressive governments. To a minor degree the jury can, and occasionally still does, play this role. The jury system is the ordinary citizen’s link with the legal process. It is supposed to safeguard individual liberty and justice because a common-sense decision on the facts either to punish or acquit is taken by fellow citizens rather than by professionals. But the system has been criticized because of its high acquittal rates; allegedly unsuitable or subjective jurors; intimidation of jurors; and administrative reason for saving time and costs. 6*
146 The Best of Just English Throughout the world the use of jury trials is limited. The French Revolution initiated trial by jury in continental Europe, and this spread to other civil-law countries, but only for criminal trials. In the 20th century jury trials have been abandoned or eliminated in most civil-law countries. Jury trials survive primarily in the common-law countries, above all, the United States. Even there and in England jury trial has declined in favor of trial by judge. Many critics urge the curtailment or elimination of the jury trial as an amateurish and inefficient method of determining a legal issue. Critics would like to replace the jury with panels of experts in relevant fields. But, after widespread opposition to such proposals, it seems as though the jury will continue in its present form. TASK 1. Answer the following questions: 1. Why is jury called “the bastion of liberty”? 2. Why has the jury system been criticized? 3. In what countries is the jury system used? Why? TASK 2. Comment on the following quotations. Which of them are for / against the jury system? Give your grounds: Words of Wisdom about Jury Service The jury, passing a verdict on the prisoner’s life, May have in the sworn twelve a thief or two Guiltier than him they try. William Shakespeare Our civilization has decided... that determining the guilt or innocence of men is a thing too important to be trusted to trained men... When it wants a library catalogued, or the solar system discovered, or any trifle of that kind, it uses up its specialists. But when it wishes anything done which is really serious, it collects twelve of the ordinary men standing round. The same thing was done, if I remember right, by the Founder of Christianity. G.K. Chesterton
Базовый курс 147 “Write that down,” the King said to the jury, and the jury eagerly wrote down all three dates on their slates, and then added them up, and reduced the answer to shillings and pence. Lewis Carroll I consider trial by jury as the only anchor ever yet imagined by man, by which a government can be held to the principles of its constitution. Thomas Jefferson It’s not only the juror’s right, but his duty to find the verdict according to his own best understanding, judgement, and conscience, though in direct opposition to the direction of the court. John Adams Providing an accused with the right to be tried by a jury of his peers gave him an inestimable safeguard against the corrupt or overzealous prosecutor. Justice Byron White TASK 3. Read the article describing the current debate on jury system in the UK: Jury System Reform Defeated in Parliament In 1999 the UK Home Secretary Jack Straw unveiled plans to limit the right to trial by jury. In the UK defendants in certain cases can choose whether they want a trial by magistrates or by judge and jury. The Home Secretary said, “England and Wales has the only jurisdiction system where defendants have the right to choose their court. In addition, trial by jury is a more expensive process than a hearing by magistrates.” Defending the proposed legislation, Mr. Straw said that it would streamline the criminal justice system, save 128 million pounds a year and prevent some defendants from “working the system”. MAGISTRATES (Justices of the Peace or JPs) are judicial officers who judge cases in lower courts. They are usually unpaid and have no formal legal qualifications, but they are respectable people who are given some training. The jury trial in its modem form stems back to 1855. Serious crimes are automatically heard by a jury as well as a wide range of middle-ranking offences such as theft and handling stolen goods. There were plans to abolish jury trials for complex fraud cases.
148 The Best of Just English proposals to allow magistrates to decide whether defendants accused of lesser offences should be entitled to jury trial. The Lords also condemned the bill as bringing in a two-tier system in which the rich would be able to defend their reputation but the poor would not. Opponents of the bill believe it would have restricted a fundamental right to jury trial by one’s peers and would erode public confidence in the criminal justice system. The legal profession, civil liberties groups, opposition parties and the Lords rejected Jack Straw’s policy. The Home Office pointed out the huge cost of such cases to the taxpayers and the strain on judges, juries and defendants. The government argued that some defendants abuse the current system delaying their trial by pleading not guilty in order to get a trial by jury, then changing their plea at the last moment in order to get a more lenient sentence. In both chambers of Parliament, however, the legislation was condemned as unjust, and the bill described as “one of the worst pieces of legislation to come for many years”. The majority of the MPs in the House of Commons voted against the TASK 4. Answer the following questions: 1. What was the subject matter of the bill proposed by the UK Home Secretary? 2. What were the reasons for introducing this bill? 3. What crimes do juries in England and Wales deal with? 4. In your opinion, why were there plans to abolish jury trials for complex cases? 5. Why was the legislation rejected by both Houses of Parliament? Explain the position of the Commons and the Lords. 6. Why would the poor suffer from this kind of legislation? TASK 5. Study the opinion poll on the UK government initiative to limit the right to trial by jury. Which of these opinions are for/ against the jury system? The new bill is considered to be the beginning of the end for Britain’s ancient jury system. The members of the public were asked a question: “Do you believe it is the fairest system available or is it old-fashioned and in need of reform?” «.____________________________________________________________________> It’s clear that the system is far from ideal. Juries of ordinary people are by their very nature more influenced by emotion than facts because they aren’t trained to deal with these. That being said, magistrates are probably not that much better placed to do so. John Cahill, UK
Базовый курс 149 The right for a suspect to have a jury has been welded into English law for hundreds of years. What right has Straw to deny people this basic right? Nick, England Flawed as the jury system is, the right to be judged by one’s peers is not something that should be tossed aside lightly, and certainly not on the grounds of expense. Kit, UK As a retired Cop I can tell you that the rule is this: if you are guilty get a good lawyer and a jury. If you are innocent you would have a better chance with a Judge only. Ту Northcutt, USA In real life it doesn’t make much difference whether you opt for trial by jury or trial by magistrates. In the Netherlands there is no trial by jury whatsoever, still I cannot see any signs of a despotic police state looming above the horizon, democracy going to pot, or personal freedom going down the drain. Frank Drop, the Netherlands If a defendant is tried by a true “jury of his peers,” then a jury trial would perhaps result injustice. If, as is currently true in the United States, and possibly also in the UK, a jury is selected from people who are not peers of the defendant, who know nothing of the case, and have nothing better to do with their time, then a jury trial becomes a two-ring circus. The ring which produces the best performance wins. Justice is incidental. It becomes all about winning. Jim, USA The idea of 12 good men/women is flawed. The jury system is a lottery and you have no guarantee that the people have an adequate grasp of the concepts involved. The court room is a forum for a display of semantics by lawyers and too many people are misled by it. Lucas, UK
150 The Best of Just English Trial by Jury is part of what the English-speaking nations of the world understand by democracy. The ordinary people don’t only decide who shall write the laws, by electing the MPs, they also decide, by serving on juries, against whom those laws shall be applied. If you argue that they are incompetent to do the latter, then by the same token you are in fact arguing that they are incompetent to do the former. T. D. Erikson, UK Although a jury by one’s peers may have its flaws, I can think of no better or less flawed system available. Sure, it may be expensive, but since when has there been a price tag on justice? If somebody can come up with a better non-biased judicial system then please feel free. But until then, I see no better alternative. Frederick Sexe, USA There seems to be a continual erosion of our judicial system. It’s another step towards justice by decree. Magistrates are essentially illegitimate: they are not elected, nor randomly chosen; they are appointees of the State. Their use should be restricted to very minor cases. The right to be judged by one’s peers is ancient and fundamental. Justice dispensed by ‘experts’ or officials is abhorrent. Mark Parker, UK The people need to be involved in the justice system. No juries, only appointed judges? I don’t think so. Joyce Cross, USA Having worked as a Barrister’s Clerk for some time I have come to the conclusion that jury trials do not always result injustice. Most criminals are accomplished liars, resulting in many juries being lead astray from the truth. As a result justice is not reached. Hannah Bell, England
Базовый курс 151 Ask many innocent victims of this flawed system. The law is a complex business and best left to those who have devoted their lives to studying it. Replace juries drawn from ordinary people with teams of professional jurors trained and qualified to perform the function. John, England DEBATE Do Juries Deliver Justice? Express your opinion on the question above. Prepare your arguments for or against. Divide into two groups—pro and con, and conduct a debate. Appoint the 'Chair ’ of the debate who will give the floor to the speakers of both teams. Use the active vocabulary from the Unit.

CHAPTER V IMPRISONMENT: RETRIBUTION OR REHABILITATION?
UNIT I PENAL AND CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS THROUGHOUT HISTORY BRAINSTORM 1. What role do correctional institutions play in the modern society? 2. Which of the following words refer to: a) goals of punishment b) correctional institutions: • Cell • Custody • Deterrent • Imprisonment • Incarceration • Isolation • Jail/Gaol • Penitentiary • Penitence • Penology • Prison • Reformation • Reformatory • Rehabilitation • Retribution • Solitary confinement I., n ... * TASK 1. Read thefollowing text and write down Russian equivalents for the words and expressions given in bold type: Development of the Prison System A prison is an institution for the confinement of persons convicted of major crimes or felonies. In the 19th and the 20th centuries, imprisonment replaced corporal punishment, execution, and banishment as the chief means of punishing serious offenders. Historically exile, execution, and various forms of corporal punishment were the most common penalties for criminal acts. In the 12th century England jails were widely used as places for the confinement of accused persons until their cases could be tried by the king's court. Imprisonment gradually came to be accepted not only as a device forholding persons awaiting trialbut also as a means ofpunishing convicted criminals.
Базовый курс 155 During the 16th century a number of houses of correction were established in England and on the continent for the reform of minor offenders. In these institutions there was little segregation by age, sex, or other condition. The main emphasis was on strict discipline and hard labour. Although reformation of offenders was intended in the houses of correction, the unsanitary conditions and lack of provisions for the welfare of the inmates soon produced widespread agitation for further changes in methods of handling criminals. Solitary confinement of criminals became an ideal among the rationalist reformers of the 18th century, who believed that solitude would help the offender to become penitent and that penitence would result in reformation. Meanwhile, strenuous opposition to the prolonged isolation of prisoners developed very early, especially in the United States. A competing philosophy of prison management, known as the ‘silent system’ was developed. The main distinguishing feature of the silent system was that prisoners were allowed to work together in the daytime. Silence was strictly enforced at all times, however, and at night the prisoners were confined in individual cells. Further refinements were developed in Irish prisons in the mid-1800s. Irish inmates progressed through three stages of confinement before they were returned to civilian life. The first portion of the sentence was served in isolation. Then the prisoners were allowed to associate with other inmates in various kinds of work projects. Finally, for six months or more before release, the prisoners were transferred to ‘intermediate prisons’, where inmates were supervised by unarmed guards and given sufficient freedom and responsibility to permit them to demonstrate their fitness for release. Release was also conditional upon the continued good conduct of the offender, who could be returned to prison if necessary. These were the steps made to fit the severity of the punishment to the severity of the crime, in the belief that the existence of clearly articulated and just penalties would act as a deterrent to crime. Since then, deterrence, rather than retribution, has become a leading principle of European penology. TASK 2. Answer the following questions: 1. What is a prison? 2. What were the means of punishing offenders before the 19th century? 3. What was the purpose of jails in the 12th century England? 4. What were the main features of houses of correction in the 16th century? 5. Why did the rationalist reformers of the 18th century seek to establish solitary confinement of criminals?
156 The Best of Just English 6. What is the ‘silent system’? 7. What were Irish prisons like in the mid-1800s? TASK 3. Read the text below and answer the following questions: 1. What are the purposes of incarceration? 2. How are these purposes obtained? 3. What three categories of prisons are described in the text? 4. What is the general principle of confining offenders in different kinds of prisons? Present-day Penal Institutions Modem prisons are quite diverse, but it is possible to make some generalisations about them. In all but minimum-security prisons, the task of maintaining physical custody of the prisoners is usually given the highest priority and is likely to dominate all other concerns. Barred cells and locked doors, periodic checking of cells, searches for contraband, and detailed regulation of inmates’ movements about the prison are all undertaken to prevent escapes. In order to forestall thievery, drug and alcohol use, violent assaults, rapes, and other types of prison crime, the inmates are subjected to rules governing every aspect of life; these do much to give the social structure of the prison its authoritarian character. The need to maintain security within prisons has prompted many countries to separate their penal institutions into categories of maximum, medium, and minimum security. Convicted offenders are assigned to a particular category on the basis of the seriousness or violent nature of their offence, the length of their sentence, their proneness to escape, and other considerations. Within a prison, the inmates are often classified into several categories and housed in corresponding cellblocks according to the security risk posed by each individual. Younger offenders are usually held in separate penal institutions that provide a stronger emphasis on treatment and correction. Prisons generally succeed in the twin purposes of isolating the criminal from society and punishing him for his crime, but the higher goal of rehabilitation is not as easily attained. An offender’s time in prison is usually
Базовый курс 157 reduced as a reward for good behaviour and conscientious performance at work. The privilege of receiving visits from family members and friends from the outside world exists in almost all penal systems. TASK 4. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. заключённый 2. нападение с применением насилия 3. некарательное воздействие и исправление 4. осуждённый 5. реабилитация личности преступника 6. тюрьма с максимальной изоляцией заключённых 7. тюрьма с минимальной изоляцией заключённых 8. тюрьма со средней степенью изоляции заключённых TASK 5. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions. Make up sentences of your own: • conscientious performance at work • proneness to escape • security risk • to forestall thievery • to give smth. the highest priority • to maintain security within prisons TASK 6. Match the following English expressions with their Russian equivalents: 1) breach of prison 2) closed prison 3) industrial prison 4) open prison 5) prison bar 6) prison breaker 7) prison education 8) prison lawyer 9) prison term 10) prison ward 11) to be sent to prison 12) to do one’s time (in prison) 13) to escape from prison а) “промышленная тюрьма” (тюрьма, где заклю- чённые работают в цехах, мастерских) Ь) бежавший из тюрьмы с) бежать /совершить побег/ из тюрьмы d) быть приговорённым к тюремному заключению е) отбывать срок в тюрьме f) перевоспитание или обучение заключённых в тюрьме g) побег из тюрьмы / побег из-под стражи h) тюремная камера i) тюремная решётка j) тюремное заключение / тюремный срок к) тюремный юрист 1) тюрьма закрытого типа т) тюрьма открытого типа (неохраняемая)
158 The Best of Just English ДЦД The Tower of London Founded nearly a millennium ago and expanded upon over the centuries since, the Tower of London has protected, housed, imprisoned and been for many the last sight they saw on Earth. It has been the seat of British government and the living quarters of monarchs, the site of renowned political intrigue, and the repository of the Crown Jewels. It has housed lions, bears, and (to this day) flightless ravens, not to mention notorious traitors and framed members of court, lords and ministers, clergymen and knights. In the Middle Ages the Tower of London became a prison and place of execution for politically related crimes, with most captives being put to death (murdered or executed). Among those killed there were the humanist Sir Thomas More (1535); the second wife of Henry VIII, Anne Boleyn (1536). Other notable inmates included Princess Elizabeth (later Elizabeth I), who was briefly imprisoned by Mary I for suspicion of conspiracy; the infamous conspirator Guy Fawkes (1606) and the adventurer Sir Walter Raleigh (1618). Even in the 20th century during World War I several spies were executed there by firing squad. TASK 7. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions: • a framed member of court • a notable inmate • a notorious traitor • a politically related crime • an infamous conspirator • the repository of the Crown Jewels • the seat of British government • the site of renowned political intrigue TASK 8. Complete the following table with the appropriate verb or noun forms: Verb Noun to plot execution to capture conspiracy to imprison protection traitor to suspect
Базовый курс 159 TASK 9. Match the names of the renowned prisoners from the box with the stories given below: Catherine Howard; Sir Walter Raleigh; Anne Boleyn; Guy Fawkes; Sir Thomas More Here are some of the unfortunates held within the Tower walls. , the Lord Chancellor and scholar who served Henry VIII until the break with Rome, refused to acknowledge Henry VIII as supreme head of the English Church, and continued adamant when the king’s subjects were required to subscribe to the oath imposed. He also protested against the divorce of Catherine of Aragon, who had given Henry only one living child, the Princess Mary. ________________________, Henry VIII’s second wife, was taken to the Tower on a charge of adultery. Before her crowning she had stayed in what is now called the ’’Queen’s House”, built below the Bell Tower in 1530. As a prisoner she returned there. Her trial took place in the medieval great hall where she was sentenced to death. ________________________was Henry VIII’s fifth wife and according to him his ‘very jewel of womanhood’. He adored her and showered her with gifts and favours and pampered her in every way. She appointed a former admirer as her private secretary and soon rumours were being whispered at court about the Queen’s misconduct. Henry’s immediate reaction was one of total disbelief. However, he ordered an investigation and found that she had really been flirting behind his back. For this he could show no mercy. She was tried, condemned and beheaded at the Tower of London. ________________________was a leading conspirator in the Gunpowder Plot to blow up Parliament. He was a Catholic convert who had served in the Spanish army before becoming involved in the plot. He and his fellow conspirators were taken to the Tower and interrogated in the Queen’s House. In January 1606 with three others, he was drawn on a hurdle from the Tower to the Houses of Parliament and there hanged, beheaded and quartered. ________________________was an explorer known for his expeditions to the Americas, and for allegedly bringing tobacco and the potato from the New World to the British Isles. A favourite of Elizabeth I, he fell thoroughly out of favour and spent 12 years in the Tower on a charge of plotting against King James I. He was released in 1616, only to find himself back there in 1618 after his fruitless expedition to look for gold mines in Guyana. This
160 The Best of Just English time he was kept in one of the most cold and direful dungeons before being beheaded six weeks later. In his speech from the scaffold he thanked God that he died in the light, and not in the dark prison of the Tower. TASK 10. Read the text and write down Russian equivalents for the words and expressions given in bold type: The Bastille The Bastille was a medieval fortress on the East side of Paris that became, in the 17th and 18th centuries, a French state prison and a place of detention for important persons charged with miscellaneous offences. The Bastille, stormed by an armed mob of Parisians in the opening days of the French Revolution, was a symbol of the despotism of the Bourbons and held an important place in the ideology of the Revolution. With its eight towers, 100 feet high, linked by walls of equal height and surrounded by a moat more than 80 feet wide, the Bastille dominated Paris. The first stone was laid on April 22, 1370, on the orders of Charles V of France, who had it built as a bastide, or fortification (the name Bastille is a corruption of bastide), to protect this wall around Paris against English attack. The Cardinal de Richelieu was the first to use the Bastille as a state prison in the 17th century. Prisoners included political troublemakersand individuals held at the request of their families, often to coerce a young member into obedience or to prevent a disreputable member from marring the family’s name. Under Louis XIV, the Bastille became a place of judicial detention; and later persons being tried by the Parliament were also detained there. It is noteworthy that prohibited books were also placed in the Bastille. The high cost of maintaining the building prompted talk of demolition in 1784. On July 14, 1789, when only seven prisoners were confined in the building, a mob advanced on the Bastille with the intention of asking the prison governor to release the arms and munitions stored there. Angered by the governor’s refusal, the people stormed and captured the place. This dramatic action came to symbolise the end of the ancient regime. The Bastille was subsequently demolished by order of the Revolutionary government. TASK 11. Answer the following questions: 1. When and why was the Bastille built?
Базовый курс 161 2. Who was the first to use the Bastille as a state prison? 3. What was the Bastille like in the 17th and 18th centuries? Who was confined there? 4. How was the Bastille demolished? TASK 12. Read the text in the section “It’s Interesting to Know”. Find more information about the research into the treatment of criminals carried out by the 18,h century humanists: f---------------------------------- It’s Interesting to Know John Howard, 1726-1790 There is in England today a society called The Howard League of Penal Reform. It is named after one of the greatest figures in the history of law in the eighteenth century. Howard was High Sheriff of Bedfordshire when in 1773 he started to investigate prison conditions. The thing that drew his interest was the discovery that innocent people were often held in gaol until they had paid the gaoler’s fees even though the court had found them not guilty. In the next three years he visited every prison in Great Britain and Ireland as well as many in Europe and wrote a book based on his experiences called The State of Prisons. He died in Russia on his way to find out about sanitary conditions in the Russian army. Through his work and that of Elizabeth Fry prisons were at last improved and prisoners treated more like human beings than animals. Cesare Beccaria, 1738—1794 Punishment of criminals in the eighteenth century was savage, from torture to death or imprisonment. One of the first people to raise a voice against the inhumanity was Beccaria, who wrote a famous book called Concerning Crimes and Punishment. He called for mercy and his pleas were heard by such people as Frederick the Great of Prussia, who was in a position to do something about unjust laws. The book was soon translated into several languages. Beccaria was one of the first people to say that the law should consider the person being tried as well as the crime he or she has committed. >-
162 The Best of Just English Elizabeth Fry, 1780—1845 Until the great reforms in law, which took place in the nineteenth century, criminals were treated with great brutality. Thieves were hanged or deported, while floggings were very common and prisons were very dirty and terribly overcrowded. Elizabeth Fry was one of the very few people who devoted their lives to improving the life of prisoners. She was a Norfolk Quaker who went among the criminals to understand them better and to improve the conditions in which they lived. In 1817 she formed a society for the improvement of prison conditions and started to take an interest in prisons in other countries. She was so successful in her work that she was thanked by the House of Commons for her efforts. REVIEW Sum up the information from the Unit. Add the facts and data that you have obtained during your classes of law. Make reports and present them in class. Use the patterns and the vocabulary from the Unit. UNIT 2 PRISON POPULATION TASK 1. Read the text below and answer the following questions: 1. What are the main categories of inmates? 2. Where are long-term prisoners usually held? 3. What is the purpose of reformatories? 4. What are open prisons? Nowadays prisoners are kept in separate institutions according to the severity of crime committed, as well as well as to the age, sex and other conditions. Consequently, the inmates include unconvicted prisoners, juvenile delinquents, women prisoners, recidivists and life-sentence prisoners.
Базовый курс 163 Most prisoners serving longer sentences are held in correctional institutions, which are usually large maximum-security buildings holding offenders in conditions of strict security. Young offenders are usually detained in reformatories, often designated under names that imply that their purpose is treatment or correction rather than punishment. Women are normally held in separate prisons. Prisoners who are not considered a danger to the community may be confined in low-security or open prisons. TASK 2. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions: • unconvicted prisoner • juvenile delinquent • recidivist • life-sentence prisoner TASK 3. Match the following English expressions with their Russian equivalents: 1) close prisoner 2) life-sentence prisoner 3) long-sentence / long-term prisoner 4) prisoner of conscience 5) prisoner of war 6) prisoner on bail 7) prisoner on trial 8) prisoner’s box 9) prisoner’s story а) “узник совести” (политический заключённый) b) версия, выдвинутая обвиняемым с) военнопленный d) лицо, содержащееся в одиночном заключении е) обвиняемый, отпущенный (из-под стражи) на поруки f) осуждённый, отбывающий долгосроч- ное тюремное заключение g) подсудимый h) приговорённый к пожизненному тюремному заключению i) скамья подсудимых TASK 4. Read the following text and write down Russian equivalents for sentences given in bold type: Prison Inmates Unconvicted Prisoners Some of the prison population consists of unconvicted prisoners held in custody and awaiting trial. These prisoners are presumed to be
164 The Best of Just English innocent and are treated accordingly. They are allowed all reasonable facilities to seek release on bail, prepare for trial, maintain contact with relatives and friends, and pursue legitimate business and social interests. They also have the right to wear their own clothes and can write and receive unlimited number of letters. Young Offenders In Britain, young offenders are held in reformatories, which are designed for the treatment, training and social rehabilitation of youth. School-age delinquents are kept in residential training schools, and young offenders between the ages of 16 and 25 who have been convicted of a criminal act serve in special facilities. The most famous of these is the Borstal Institution. Women Prisoners Women are usually held in smaller prisons with special programmes and recreational opportunities offered to reflect stereotyped female roles, with emphasis on housekeeping, sewing and typing skills. Women prisoners do not wear prison uniform and there is a clothing allowance to help pay for clothes while in prison. Some prisons provide mother and baby units, which enable babies to remain with their mothers where that is found to be in the best interests of the child. In addition to the usual visiting arrangement, several prisons allow extended visits to enable women to spend the whole day with their children in an informal atmosphere. Habitual Offenders Criminals who have frequently been apprehended and convicted, who have manifested a settled practice in crime, and who are presumed to be a danger to the society in which they live are referred to as habitual offenders. Studies of the yearly intake of prisons, reformatories, and jails in the United States and Europe show that from one-half to two-thirds of those imprisoned have served previous sentences in the same or in other institutions. The conclusion is that the criminal population is made up largely of those for whom criminal behaviour has become habitual; moreover, penal institutions appear to do little to change their basic behaviour patterns. Though the percentage of recidivists runs high for all offenders, it is greatest among those convicted of such minor charges as vagrancy, drunkenness, prostitution, and disturbing the peace. These are more likely than serious criminal charges to result from an entire way of life. Accordingly, their root causes are rarely susceptible to cure by jailing.
Базовый курс 165 Life-sentence Prisoners Since the capital punishment has been abolished in Britain, the severest penalty for the most atrocious crimes, such as murder, is life imprisonment. Those serving life sentences for the murder of police and prison officers, terrorist murders, murder by firearms in the cause of robbery and the sexual or sadistic murder of children are normally detained for at least twenty years. Life sentences for offences other than murder can be reduced up to nine years. On release, all life-sentence prisoners remain on licence for the rest of their lives and are subject to recall should their behaviour suggest that they might again be a danger to the public. TASK 5. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. исправительное заведение для малолетних правонарушителей 2. исправление и перевоспитание заключённых 3. рецидивист (2) 4. бродяжничество 5. нарушение общественного порядка 6. сотрудник исправительного учреждения 7. отбывать наказание (в тюрьме) TASK 6. Answer the following questions: 1. What privileges do unconvicted prisoners have? 2. What are the purposes of reformatories? 3. What is the most famous facility for young offenders? 4. What special programmes are established for women prisoners? 5. What additional rights do women prisoners have? 6. What are habitual offenders? 7. What are the most typical crimes committed by recidivists? 8. What is the severest penalty for the most atrocious crimes? 9. What kinds of ‘lifers’ are sentenced to the longest term of imprisonment? 10. How is life sentence typically reduced in Britain? 11. How are ‘lifers’ supervised when released? TASK 7. The word BAIL has the following meanings in legal Russian: 1) поручительство civil bail - поручительство в гражданском процессе
166 The Best of Just English 2) передача на поруки; брать на поруки; передавать на поруки to free on bail — освободить на поруки 3) поручитель; поручители to be / to go bail - стать поручителем 4) залог при передаче на поруки excessive bail — чрезмерная сумма залога Match the following English expressions with their Russian equivalents: 1) to stand bail for smb. 2) to accept /to allow / to take bail for the prisoner 3) to forfeit /to jump one’s bail 4) to find bail 5) release on bail 6) straw bail 7) to surrender to one’s bail 8) to be out on bail 9) to deny bail а) явиться в суд (о выпущенном под залог) Ь) быть отпущенным на поруки с) внести залог / поручиться за кого-либо d) найти себе поручителя е) не явиться в суд (об отпущен- ном под залог) f) ненадёжное / “липовое” поручи- тельство g) освобождение под залог h) отказать в поручительстве i) отпустить арестованного на поруки (под залог) TASK 8. Read the article below and write down the criminal record of the convict: A Lifer Keen on Canaries Robert Franklin is an American criminal, a convicted murderer who became a self-taught ornithologist during his 54 years in prison, forty-two of them in solitary confinement. He became known for his contribution to the study of birds. At the age of 13 Franklin ran away from home and, by the age of 18, was in Alaska, working as a pimp and living with a dance-hall girl. An argument over the girl led to his fighting and killing a man. Pleading guilty to manslaughter in 1909, he was sentenced to 12 years in a federal prison. After stabbing a fellow prisoner and proving generally troublesome, he was transferred to Kansas, where he continued to be a loner but began to educate himself, taking university extension courses. In 1916 he stabbed
Базовый курс 167 and killed a guard and was tried, convicted and sentenced to hanging, but in 1920 President Woodrow Wilson commuted his sentence to life imprisonment in solitary confinement Thereafter, mostly in solitary confinement, he began raising canaries and other birds, collecting laboratory equipment, and studying the diseases of birds and their breeding and care. Some of his research writings were smuggled out of prison and published in 1943. Later, however, he was allowed to continue his research but denied further right of publication. His research was considered an important work in the field of ornithology. DISCUSSION Using the vocabulary and facts from the Unit discuss the following: • There are groups of inmates who should have additional rights. • Kids brought up in prison are likely to become criminals. • Penal institutions appear to do little to cure a habitual offender by jailing. UNIT 3 PRISON LIFE TASK I. Read the following text and write down Russian equivalents for sentences given in bold type: Among the ‘pains of imprisonment’ that both male and female inmates face are, in the first place, the deprivation of liberty and the loneliness and boredom of imprisonment. Second, prisoners are deprived of all goods and services from the outside world. Stripped of possessions, they often equate their material losses with personal inadequacy. The third deprivation for the majority is the absence of heterosexual relationships. Fourth, prisoners are subjected to vast body of institutional regulations designed to control every aspect of behaviour. In part this control forms the deprivation of freedom that is the essence of imprisonment, and in part it is necessary adjunct as a means
168 The Best of Just English of maintaining security, controlling the introduction of weapons, contraband substances and preventing escapes. Most prisons limit the number of visits that a prisoner may receive from his family or friends. Visits normally take place within the sight of an officer, and in some cases within his hearing. In many prisons, visits are conducted with the prisoner sitting on one side of the table and his visitor on the other, with a wire mesh partition between them; the visitor may be searched for contraband. Prisoners may write and receive letters and may make telephone calls. Correspondence of prisoners is usually subject to censorship by the prison authorities, and prisoners may not write more than one letter each week. Privileges include a personal radio, books, periodicals and newspapers. They also have an opportunity to watch television (in many prisons each prisoner has a TV-set), and to make purchases from the prison shop with money earned in prison. Control of the prison is maintained by a number of disciplinary sanctions, which may include forfeiture of privileges, confinement within a punishment block or cell, or the loss of remission or good time (time deducted from the sentence as a reward for good behaviour). Typically, the prohibited offences include mutiny and violence to officers; escaping, or being absent from a place where the prisoner is required to be and possessing unauthorised articles. TASK 2. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions and reproduce the context in which they were used: • body of institutional regulations • contraband substance • forfeiture of privileges • personal inadequacy • to be stripped of possessions • to control the introduction of weapons • to possess unauthorised articles
Базовый курс 169 TASK 3. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. лишение свободы 2. бунт, мятеж 3. заключённый 4. обыск, досмотр 5. подлежать цензуре TASK 4. Answer the following questions: 1. What deprivations do prisoners suffer? 2. What is the aim of controlling every aspect of prisoner’s life? 3. What are the institutional regulations for visits that prisoners may receive? 4. What rights do prisoners have? 5. What disciplinary sanctions are imposed to maintain security in prison? TASK 5. Read the text and answer the following questions. Write down Russian equivalents for sentences given in bold type. 1. What rights do prisoners enjoy in Europe and the United States? 2. What have you learned about Habeas Corpus and mandamus? 3. Why are the courts now willing to limit prisoners’ access to the federal courts in the United States? Prisoners’ Rights The idea that a prisoner has rights that may be protected by actions in the courts has been developed in Europe and the United States. In England, in the absence of a written constitution, prisoners resorting to the courts have relied on the general principles of administrative law, which require fair procedures by disciplinary bodies. Although many actions brought by prisoners have been unsuccessful, prison disciplinary procedures have been improved as a result of such litigation. In the U.S. actions brought under the provisions of the U.S. Constitution (notably the Eighth and the Fourteenth amendments) establish that prisoners are entitled to the protection of the AMENDMENT 8 Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.
170 The Best of Just English AMENDMENT 14 No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. 4________________________________z Constitution. Early U.S. court decisions ruled that prisoners had forfeited all of the rights enjoyed by free citizens. Eventually, the courts recognised certain rights and legal remedies available to prisoners, who may now file their own suits, have direct access to the federal courts, and file writs of Habeas Corpus and mandamus. Under Habeas Corpus the prisoner may request release, transfer, or another remedy for some aspect of confinement. Mandamus is a command issue by a court directing a prison administrator to carry out a legal responsibility—to provide a sick prisoner with medical care, for example—or to restore ‘the prisoner’ rights that have been illegally denied. Prisoners have sought remedies for many problems, including relief from unreasonable searches, release from solitary confinement, and the procuring of withheld mail. Recent decisions have indicated, however, that the courts are now willing to limit legal writs by prisoners in deference to the security requirements of the prison. TASK 6. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. судебный процесс, судебное дело 2. предписание Хабеас Корпус 3. судебный приказ нижестоящему суду или должностному лицу 4. тюремное заключение 5. необоснованный обыск 6. предъявить иск; возбудить судебное дело (2) 7. восстанавливать в правах 8. добиваться судебной защиты TASK 7. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions: • to resort to the court • to forfeit a right • release from solitary confinement • procuring of withheld mail • prison security requirements
Базовый курс 171 TASK 8. Read the articles below and point out the opposite views on prison facilities: Criticism of Jail TV The UK Government has been accused of going “soft on crime” for considering a proposal to allow thousands of prisoners to have televisions in their cells. The Home Office has asked the Prison Service to investigate the issue to try to defuse tensions in Britain’s overcrowded jails. Prison Service officials said no decisions had been made and said it was weighing up the ‘pros and cons’ of the scheme. Home Affairs spokesman, James Clappison, said: “We think prison conditions should be decent and austere and prisons should be a punishment. We think televisions in cells are not consistent with that. We think it’s soft on criminals.” The former Home Secretary, Michael Howard, said: “Televisions in cells could provide a calming influence and a powerful incentive to good conduct. It could also be used for educational and communication purposes.” Deputy director of the Prison Reform Trust, Nick Flynn, said: “It’s a delicate matter and it shouldn’t be used for prisoners to sit around to watch football. But it could be a useful tool for the Prison Service to give information to prisoners.” A Manicure for Jack the Ripper at the Killers’ Health Club Some of Britain’s most notorious killers and rapists are being offered the luxury of beauty therapy. They can enjoy facials, manicures and pedicures at Ashworth maximum security hospital’s new Health and Beauty Center club. The 650 male and female patients can also enjoy a sauna, solarium and massage area at the mental hospital near Liverpool. These inmates have avoided prison because the courts decided they are either mentally ill or criminally insane. Hospital authorities said that the facilities available to inmates “especially benefited those with low self-esteem or who found it difficult to relax.” Among the ‘clients’ of the Club is a knifeman who attacked 10 people and is now pleading for access to a fully equipped gym, and a sadistic rapist undergoing aromatherapy treatment.
172 The Best of Just English DISCUSSION Using the vocabulary and facts from the articles above discuss the following: • Prison conditions should be decent and austere and prisons should be a punishment. • Prison facilities provide a calming influence and a powerful incentive to good conduct. TASK 9. Read the text below and write down a list ofproblems that prison inmates face: The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights declares that “all persons deprived of their liberty shall be treated with humanity and with respect for the inherent dignity of the human person”. However, in reality all over the world, hundreds of thousands of people are being held in prisons that are: squalid, overcrowded, dilapidated, insanitary, inhumane, unjust, very expensive and ineffective in tackling crime. In many countries, conditions are so bad that prisoners die from malnutrition, diseases, attacks from other prisoners or prison staff, or suicide. Under extremely overcrowded and insanitary conditions, diseases such as tuberculosis and dysentery spread very rapidly, and without medical treatment they may easily be fatal. At the same time there is a small number of people who present such a danger to the community or to themselves that they need to be detained. However, for most offences, imprisonment is not an effective penalty. Many countries which may have very high prison populations have very high crime rates. This shows that prison is probably not deterring many people from crime. Whilst in prison, the attitudes of minor offenders may harden as they mix with those convicted of more serious crimes. This often leads to minor offenders committing more serious crime after they are released from prison. Large amounts of money are spent on locking people up, even when prison staff are poorly paid, buildings are not maintained and prisoners are treated inadequately. In many countries, prison populations have been increasing substantially over recent years. Most prisoners are young, poor, urban men.
Базовый курс 173 Locking up this section of the general population for substantial periods has a destabilising effect on the whole society in the longer term. TASK 10. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. высокий уровень преступности 2. лицо, совершившее малозначительное правонарушение 3. эффективная мера наказания 4. удержать от совершения преступления 5. посадить, “упрятать” в тюрьму 6. освободить из тюрьмы TASK 11. Complete the text using the words from the box: restraint; release date; recidivism; rehabilitate; preventive ,_________________________________________________________________________> Criticism of the present prison system of punishment has focused mainly on its rehabilitative and functions. Critics point out that— the commission of another crime after the offender has served a sentence for the first time — is high. Thus the system seems ineffective as a cure for, or a upon, those factors in offenders which may lead to criminal acts. Furthermore, because there is no way to predict the future behaviour of individuals, the length of sentence and the may have no relationship to the prison time necessary to effect a cure in, or_______________an offender. Many criminologists insist that there is no adequate body to demonstrate that any punishment, capital punishment included, has a restraining effect on potential criminal behaviour. CREATIVE WRITING Write down a list ofmeasures necessary to improve the present prison system. Consider the information from the texts above.
174 The Best of Just English DEBATE Prisons: A Solution to Crime? Using the vocabulary andfacts from the Unit, discuss the following: • Hundreds of thousands of people are imprisoned in inhumane conditions. • Many countries with very high prison populations have very high crime rates. • There are people who present such a danger to the community that they need to be detained. • Prison does not deter many people from crime. • Whilst in prison, the attitudes of minor offenders harden as they mix with those convicted of more serious crimes. • All persons deprived of their liberty shall be treated with humanity and with respect for the inherent dignity of the human person. UNIT 4 ALTERNATIVES TO PRISON TASK 1. Read the following text and write down Russian equivalents for sentences given in bold type: Prison Improvements and Alternatives In most criminal justice systems the majority of offenders are dealt with by means other than custody — by fines and other financial penalties, by probation or supervision, or by orders to make reparation in some practical form to the community. Fine The most common penalty, fine, avoids the disadvantages of many other forms of sentence; it is inexpensive to administer and does not normally have the side effects, such as social stigma and loss of job that may follow imprisonment. However, there are dangers that the imposition of financial penalties may result in more affluent offenders
Базовый курс 175 receiving penalties that they can easily discharge, while less affluent offenders are placed under burdens that they cannot sustain. Restitution Related to the fine is an order to pay restitution (in some countries termed “compensation”). The principle of restitution is popular in some countries as an alternative to punitive sentencing, but there are some drawbacks. One is the possibility, as in the case of the fine, that the more affluent offender may receive favourable treatment from the court because he is able to pay restitution. The second drawback is that such schemes do not help all victims of crime. Only those who are the victims of crimes for which the offender is caught and convicted and has the funds to pay restitution are likely to be recompensed. Victims of crimes of violence in some countries — such as England and Canada — are entitled to restitution from public funds, whether or not the offender is detected or has the resources necessary to compensate. Probation There are many ways of dealing with offenders that do not involve the payment of money. One is probation, a system that takes many different forms in different jurisdictions. However, that essentially involves the suspension of sentence on the offender subject to the condition that he is supervised while living in the community by a probation officer and possibly agrees to comply with such other requirements as the court may think appropriate. Usually, if the offender complies with the probation order and commits no further offence while it is in force, no other penalty is imposed. If he breaks the requirement of the order or commits another offence, he can be brought back before the court and punished for the original offence as well as the later one. Suspended Sentence In many American states probation is combined with a suspended sentence, so that the sentence the offender will have to serve if he breaks the order is fixed in advance. In England the sentence is not fixed in advance, and the court has complete discretion if there is a breach of probation terms to sentence the offender for the original crime in light of his later behaviour. Reparation The concept of reparation has gained in popularity in a number of jurisdictions. Under this method, the offender makes good the damage he 7 - 9099
176 The Best of Just English has done through his crime, not by paying money but by providing services to the victim directly or indirectly through the community. In England this takes the form of the community service order, under which the court is empowered to order anyone who is convicted of an offence that could be punished with imprisonment to perform up to 240 hours of unpaid work for the community, usually over a period of not more than 12 months. The kind of work involved varies according to the area, the time of year, and the abilities of the offender; in some cases it may involve heavy physical labour, but in others it may require such work as the provision of help to handicapped people. If the offender completes the hours of work ordered by the court, he receives no further penalty, but if he fails to carry out the work without reasonable excuse, he can be re-sentenced for the original offence. This method is less expensive to administer than imprisonment, less damaging to the offender and his family, and more useful to the community. There are some doubts about the extent to which the availability of community service as an alternative to prison weakens the deterrent effect of the criminal law, but there can be no doubt that community service has become an established sentencing alternative. Disqualification Other alternatives to prison are based on the idea of preventing an offender from committing further offences, without necessarily confining him in a prison. The most familiar power of this kind is that of disqualifying an offender from driving a motor vehicle or from holding a driver’s license. Other forms of disqualification may be imposed on offenders convicted of particular types of crimes: a fraudulent company director may be disqualified from being involved in the direction of a company, a corrupt politician may be disqualified from holding public office, or a parent who sexually abuses his children may be deprived of parental authority over them. It appears, however, that imprisonment will still remain the major instrument of punishment. In light of the difficulties surrounding its use, prison ideally should be employed as a last resort for those offenders who cannot be handled in any other way. TASK 2. Find in the text above the English equivalents for the following words and expressions: 1. быть лишенным водительских прав 2. насильственное преступление 3. иметь право на возмещение ущерба
Базовый курс 177 4. соответствовать требованиям 5. коррумпированный политик 6. быть лишенным родительских прав 7. отсрочка исполнения приговора или наказания 8. сдерживающий эффект 9. сотрудник службы пробации 10. судебный приказ о направлении на пробацию 11. экономические санкции 12. условное осуждение 13. наблюдение, надзор 14. отсроченный приговор 15. компенсация, возмещение (3) 16. общественные работы TASK 3. Read the text below and comment on the sentence given in bold type. Tracking Humans: The Electronic Bracelet in the Modern World Alternatives to incarceration such as the use of fines, community service, and restitution are products of the social movements of the 1960s. The rationalizations of these alternatives have been cost effectiveness, efficiency and humaneness. The same arguments have been associated with the newest community-based sanction, “electronic monitoring”. It is clear that such an alternative may yield these benefits. The electronic monitoring system generally requires the offender to wear an electronic bracelet around his ankle or wrist. The monitoring is usually of two types: passive or active. The passive system provides for random telephone monitoring by authorities in order to confirm that it is the specific offender who is present and responding. In contrast, an active system provides continuous information as to whether an individual is within the range, generally 150 to 200 feet, of a transmitter located within their residence. This is commonly referred to as continuous monitoring. The overriding rationale in favour of electronic monitoring appears to centre on its potential to alleviate both prison overcrowding and the financial burden of incarceration. The effects of imprisonment on an individual may be great. It is common knowledge that imprisonment returns a man to society with a scarred psyche, unpaid debts and financial losses, a highly disruptive if not irreparably broken family, children who lose respect for their parent, no job, and a gap in his life history that is hard to explain when he seeks a new job. In this respect, electronic monitoring allows the offender to remain at home where he can continue to hold employment and maintain any dependent children. Consequently, society may benefit as well, since there will be no 7*
178 The Best of Just English additional burden placed on the welfare system, as would be the case if an offender with dependent family members was imprisoned. Violent crimes committed by electronically monitored offenders are rare. About one out of twenty-five electronically monitored offenders commit crimes, and the vast majority of these new offences are non- violent. Moreover, these figures compare favourably with other monitoring systems, including bail and probation. TASK 4. Answer the following questions: 1. What is the electronic monitoring system? What is its purpose? 2. What is the difference between passive and active monitoring? 3. What are the advantages of electronic monitoring compared to incarceration? What are its drawbacks? TASK 5. Study the texts above (Task 1 and Task3) and write down the advantages and disadvantages of each alternative to imprisonment. Make up your own list of prison alternatives. TASK 6. Read the following text and answer the questions: 1. What approach characterises the Dutch punitive system? 2. What penalties do the Dutch prefer to impose on their criminals? 3. What are the prisons in Holland like? 4. What rights do prisoners enjoy in the Netherlands? 5. What is the goal of humanitarian treatment of offenders in Holland? The Netherlands: a Land without Prisons Soaring crime rates and law-and-order backlash are hardly unique to the United States, but not all countries have taken the ‘lock-’em-up-and- throw-away-the-key ’ approach. Many nations, in fact, have largely shelved the punitive psychology in dealing with criminals — and none more forthrightly than Holland. The Dutch have adopted an innovative and remarkably humane system of dealing with law-breakers, with the result that the Netherlands is close to becoming a land without prisons. And the policy is apparently paying dividends: crime is certainly climbing much more slowly there than in all other countries. The Dutch hold the view that harsh treatment and ‘get-tough’ atti- tudes only aggravate the problems that lead a person to crime. “A prison
Базовый курс 179 sentence does little to resocialise a person”, says vice-president of the Hague Court. “It more likely leads to rancour and bitterness. A mild sentence, possibly even just a fine, shows an offender that society cares about him.” Because of this benevolent concept fewer and fewer people are serving time in Holland. Whenever possible, the Dutch prefer to fine law — breakers rather than clap them in jail. But even for those imprisoned, every effort is made to provide an environment that will rehabilitate the convicts. While, as one official put it, “Dutch prisons are not Hilton Hotels,” neither are they ugly fortresses full of cellblocks and harassment. Several prisons in Holland are country villas with only a handful of prisoners. In many institutions prisoners are allowed to wear their own clothes and keep personal possessions; they are given comfortably furnished rooms with such homey items as curtains, and they often are allowed to work outside the prison or leave from time to time to visit their families. Moreover, Holland has an extraordinary one-to-one ratio between prisoner staff members and inmates. “Our objective”, — says the Deputy Prison Director, — “is not to make life pleasant for prisoners, but to normalize it as much as possible to prepare the prisoners for a return to society.” Dutch officials maintain that their philosophy of short prison sentences and humanitarian treatment is essential if convicts are not to become repeaters. “A heavy sentence,” — they say, — “keeps a person out of possible mischief longer, but it merely postpones and aggravates the problem of recidivism.” Given that kind of success, it is not surprising that Holland’s liberal penal philosophy has won applause. TASK 7. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions from the text above: • soaring crime rates • law-and-order backlash • ‘lock-’em-up-and-throw-away-the-key’ approach • to shelve the punitive psychology • get-tough attitudes • to resocialise a person • benevolent concept • homey items • to become repeaters
180 The Best of Just English TASK 8. Render the following passage into English paying special attention to the words and expressions in bold type: Швеция прославилась своим гуманным отношением к людям, преступившим закон. Особый интерес вызывают качественно но- вые подходы к решению задач борьбы с преступностью в рамках исправительных учреждений. В основе альтернативных программ лежит идея, состоящая в том, что преступление порождено обще- ством, социальной средой, сформировавшей нарушителя. Преступ- ники становятся таковыми из-за жизненных невзгод, и только особо опасных преступников следует заключать в тюрьму — изолиро- вать от общества. В связи с этим в Швеции, стране с высоким уров- нем жизни, совершенно иная тенденция борьбы с преступностью: в большинстве случаев мера наказания за совершенное преступле- ние — это не заключение под стражу, а взимание штрафов и про- бация, т.е. надзор за условно осужденными, либо досрочно освобож- дёнными. Существуют также специальные медицинские учреждения, которые оказывают психологическую помощь нарушителям зако- на и построены так называемые ‘промышленные тюрьмы’, где зак- лючённые работают в цехах и мастерских. UNIT 5 REHABILITATION BRAINSTORM The word REHABILITA TION has the following meanings in legal Russian: 1) восстановление в правах, реабилитация rehabilitation of offender — реабилитация (восстановление в правах) преступника 2) реабилитация личности преступника (приспособление его к условиям жизни в обществе) correctional rehabilitation — исправительная реабилитация, исправление преступника Comment on the meanings of this concept.
Базовый курс 181 TASK 1. Match the following English expressions with their Russian equivalents: 1) certificate of rehabilitation 2) legal rehabilitation 3) psychiatric rehabilitation 4) rehabilitation agency 5) rehabilitation centre 6) rehabilitation facility 7) social rehabilitation 8) vocational rehabilitation а) юридическая реабилитация, восстанов- ление в правах b) психиатрическая реабилитация с) социальная реабилитация (восстанов- ление личности в смысле приспособле- ния её к условиям жизни в обществе) d) профессиональная реабилитация е) орган по вопросам социальной реаби- литации отбывших наказание преступ- ников f) центр социальной реабилитации (лиц, освободившихся из заключения) g) справка о реабилитации h) исправительное заведение TASK 2. Read the text and translate the words and expressions given in bold type in writing: Preparation for Release The Prison Services in England, Wales and in Scotland have a duty to prepare prisoners for release. Planning for safe release begins at the start of an offender’s sentence and ties in with all training, education and work experience provided. It is directed at equipping prisoners to fit back into society and to cope with life without re-offending. Full time education of 15 hours a week is compulsory for young offenders below school leaving age. For older offenders it is voluntary. Some prisoners study for public examinations, including those of the Open University. Physical education is voluntary foradult offenders, but compulsory for young offenders. Practically all prisons have physical education facilities. Inmates sometimes compete against teams in local community. Prison industries aim to give work and experience which will assist prisoners when released. At the same time it reduces the cost of the prison
182 The Best of Just English system. The main industries are: clothing and textile manufacture, engineering, woodwork, farming, etc. Pre-release Programmes Pre-release programmes enable selected long-term prisoners to spend their last six months before release in certain hostels attached to prisons, to help themre-adapt to society. Hostellers work in the outside community and return to the hostel each evening. Weekend leave allows hostellers to renew ties with their families. All this is designed to help the inmates make the transition from prison to community. In Northern Ireland prisoners serving fixed sentences may have short periods of leave near the end of their sentences and at Christmas. Prisoners are given a nine-month pre- release programme, which includes employment outside the prison. Innovative Programmes Attempts to aid the prisoner’s return to society have led to the development of several innovative programmes. Furloughs provide home visits of 48—72 hours for a prisoner nearing his release date; they are intended to aid in restoring family ties and in job seeking. The work release programme permits inmates to test their work skills and earn money outside the institution for the major part of the day. Aftercare Professional social work support is given to offenders following their release to help adjust on their return to society. All young offenders and all adult offenders sentenced to 12 months imprisonment and over are supervised on release by the probation service—or, in the case of certain young offenders—by local authority social services departments. Aftercare programmes are designed to protect public safety by monitoring inmates reintegration into the community while making sure they receive needed treatment and services. Existing aftercare programmes are effective in reducing juvenile recidivism. TASK 3. Answer the following questions: 1. What are the main trends in preparing prisoners for release? 2. What is the aim of pre-release programmes? 3. What innovative programmes are established to aid the prisoner’s return to society? 4. What are aftercare programmes designed for?
Базовый курс 183 TASK 4. Read the article below and comment on the statements given in bold type: Prisoners Prior to Release In the past local prisons were used as pre-release centres, and indeed some of them still retain hostels for that purpose. Being near the court in which offenders are sentenced, they are also near the community into which short-term prisoners will be released. Therefore it would seem sensible that as many of these prisoners as possible should serve their sentences as near to that community as possible, and that long-term prisoners should be returned there for the last part of their sentence, so that the community, including the prisoner’s family, can be included in work done with them prior to release, as envisaged in Lord Woofs vision of community prisons. Bearing in mind how many prisoners come from inner-city areas, adjacent to large local prisons, it is believed that hostels are a development, or a return to former practice, that could be examined with advantage. TASK 5. Render the following passage into English paying special attention to the words and expressions in bold type: В современном мире широко дискутируется вопрос о правах заключенных. Причем речь идет не о базовых правах для этой ка- тегории людей, а о праве на вполне цивилизованную жизнь в усло- виях заключения. Например, в Великобритании при многих тюрь-
184 The Best of Just English мах построены гимнастические залы, открыты библиотеки. Осуж- денные в английских тюрьмах занимаются физическим трудом, обу- чаются определенным видам ремесел, например, пошиву одежды, строительству зданий, столярному ремеслу, работе в прачечной, сель- скохозяйственному труду, садоводству. Осужденные в Великобритании могут повысить свой образо- вательный уровень. Так, для несовершеннолетних правонаруши- телей, еще не окончивших школу, 15 часов занятий в неделю обяза- тельны. Совершеннолетние преступники могут получать образо- вание на добровольной основе. Заключенным даже дается возмож- ность подготовиться к экзаменам в Открытый Университет (заочная система образования). Цель этих программ — помочь осужденному найти работу, ког- да он будет отпущен на свободу. Подобное отношение к человеку, преступившему закон, очень важно в свете реабилитации личности преступника (что означает приспособление его к условиям жизни в обществе среди законопослушных граждан). Одна из причин существования рецидивизма заключается в том, что, выйдя на сво- боду, человек сталкивается с враждебным отношением общества. Приобретение навыков, которые пригодятся человеку, отбывше- му тюремное заключение, при выходе на свободу снижает вероят- ность того, что он снова встанет на преступный путь. TASK 6. Read the ex-convict’s letter. What message does he want to get across? An Ex-Prisoner’s Testimony My reason for testifying publicly about areas of my life where the scars have still not healed is that I would like to help in the search for more satisfactory and more caring responses to the problems of delinquency. I come from what is euphemistically known as a working-class background, in other words from the underclass. I was one of seven children, and we were so poor that none of us was able to stay on at school beyond the minimum leaving age. When I was seventeen I was arrested, with some of my childhood buddies, for a hold-up committed with a dummy weapon. Prison came as a brutal shock. The appalling physical conditions made me feel I had stepped back into an age of barbarity. The grim universe within the prison walls not only seemed out of touch with the outside world but to be embedded in a punitive mentality bordering on bestiality. I felt utterly isolated from the prison officers and my fellow inmates. I also felt
Базовый курс 185 cut off from myself, and this was not the least of the dangers I was up against. I soon learned what life in the jungle is all about. If you want to survive you can’t afford to trust another living soul. You start by withdrawing into a shell. Then, if you don’t crack up, you get tougher, carefully concealing your slightest weaknesses. You have to think twice about every move you make. A misplaced word or glance could lead to all sorts of trouble. The pressure was so intense that whatever vague feelings of remorse I might have had gave way to a strong sense of injustice. When you’re always on your guard you suffer physical and psychological harm that is impossible to measure. After serving four-and- a-half years of a six-year sentence, I came out broken and bent on revenge. Reintegration is a term that should be added to the list of empty, meaningless words. Mysteriously, everyone I contacted with a view to a job shied away as if they had been tipped off about me. I wondered for a long time whether life was worth living but loving support from my relatives helped me get back on my feet. Whatever some people may think, it’s never too late to start again. But what a waste! Looking back, I can’t help thinking it could have been avoided. TASK 7. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions: • dummy weapon • the underclass • to be bent on revenge • to be on one’s guard • to be out of touch with smb./smth. • to commit a hold-up • to contact smb. with a view to a job • to get tough • to shy away from smb. • to tip off about smb. TASK 8. Answer the following questions: 1. What prompted the young man’s slide into a life of crime? 2. Why did prison come as a brutal shock? 3. Why did the young man feel cut off from himself in prison? 4. In your opinion ow did the employers know that the man was an ex- convict?
186 The Best of Just English TASK 9. Read the letter and answer the question: would you help the ex-convict and why? The Inmate’s Letter Dear NEEDED Friend, My name is Leonard Singleton. Very soon I will be released from prison. I have no family support, no friends, no money, and no home to return to. At the time of my release, I will be given $25 and a bus ticket and then released into the streets, homeless and alone. I was previously released under the same conditions, which resulted in my resorting to crime to provide housing, clothing, and food for myself. Just as you are sick and tired of the crime, the criminals and being victimized, please believe me, SO AM 1.1 am desperately tired of robbing, stealing and victimizing people. I never wanted to be a criminal. I made a very serious mistake by getting involved with the wrong crowd, doing the wrong things. I lost my family, freedom, and integrity. I am ashamed of myself for disgracing, embarrassing, and hurting my family and innocent victims. My pain and shame for the crimes I formerly committed goes beyond remorse and a plea for forgiveness. I cannot change the past, but I do ask for forgiveness and an opportunity to live a better life. I am asking you to help me with a fresh, new start. I need your help for construction tools and equipment, housing, clothing, food, utilities, household items, etc. With this help, I can put a roof over my head. I can focus on and acquire employment, and begin building a decent life. PLEASE HELP ME. PLEASE. I have no one else to turn to. If you try to understand my situation and need for your help, please address a donation, check, or money order, payable to: Leonard Singleton Acct. #0535080529, and mail today to: Liberty Savings Bank 330 West National Road Englewood, Ohio 45322-1496 I don’t know what else to write to persuade you to help me. I do pray, God will touch your heart, to let you know I am sincere and worthy of your generous support.
Базовый курс 187 Thank you for reading my message, and thank you for giving me a second chance. Sincerely, Leonard Singleton TASK 10. Study the letters of two convicts (Task 6 and Task 9). Compare the conclusions they arrived at on release. How did the community react to their attempts to fit back into society? DEBATE Reintegration: A Real Process or a Meaningless Word? Prepare your arguments for or against the statements below. Use the active vocabulary from the Unit. Divide into two groups - pro and con, and conduct a debate. Appoint the ‘Chair ’ ofthe debate who will give thefloor to the speakers of both teams. • Society is not ready to accept ex-prisoners. They will always be objects of suspicion in the community. • Society helps prisoners make the transition from prison to the community. • It’s never too late to start again.

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PART I FAMOUS LEGAL DOCUMENTS THROUGHOUT HISTORY (EXTRACTS) Hammurabi’s Code of Laws (1758 B.C.) Here is what the inscription on the sacred pillar says: .... Hammurabi, the protecting king am I. The great gods have called me... I am here to reign so that the strong might not injure the weak, in order to protect the widows and orphans, to bespeak justice in the land, to settle all disputes, and heal all injuries, set up these my precious words, written upon my memorial stone, before the image of me, as king of righteousness. My words are well considered; there is no wisdom like unto mine. Let my name be ever repeated; let the oppressed, who has a case at law, come and stand before this my image as king of righteousness; let him read the inscription, and understand my precious words: the inscription will explain his case to him; he will find out what is just, and his heart will be glad, so that he will say: “Hammurabi is a ruler, who is as a father to his subjects, who holds the words of Marduk in reverence, who has bestowed benefits for ever and ever on his subjects, and has established order in the land.” [...] 2. If any one brings an accusation against a man, and the accused goes to the river and leaps into the river, if he sinks in the river his accuser shall take possession of his house. But if the river proves that the accused is not guilty, and he escapes unhurt, then he who has brought the accusation shall be put to death, while he who leaped into the river shall take possession of the house that had belonged to his accuser. [...] 5. If a judge trying a case, reaches a decision, and presents his judgment in writing; if later error shall appear in his decision, and it be through his own fault, then he shall pay twelve times the fine set by him in the case, and he shall be publicly removed from the judge’s bench, and never again shall he sit there to render judgement. 6. If any one steals the property of a temple or of the court, he shall be put to death, and also the one who receives the stolen thing from him shall be put to death. [...]
Базовый курс 191 16. If any one receives into his house a runaway male or female slave, and does not bring it out at the public proclamation, the master of the house shall be put to death. [...] 21. If any one breaks a hole into a house (breaks in to steal), he shall be put to death before that hole and be buried. 22. If any one is committing a robbery and is caught, then he shall be put to death. [...] 25. If fire breaks out in a house, and someone who comes to put it out casts his eye upon the property of the owner of the house, and takes the property of the master of the house, he shall be thrown into that self-same fire. [...] 109. If conspirators meet in the house of a tavern-keeper, and these conspirators are not captured and delivered to the court, the tavern-keeper shall be put to death. [...] 112. If any one be on a journey and entrusts silver, gold, precious stones, or any movable property to another, and wishes to recover it from him; if the latter does not bring all of the property to the appointed place, but appropriates it to his own use, then shall this man, who did not bring the property to hand it over, be convicted, and he shall pay fivefold for all that had been entrusted to him. [...] 117. If any one fails to meet a claim for debt, and sells himself, his wife, his son, and daughter for money or gives them away to forced labour, they shall work for three years in the house of the man who bought them, or the proprietor, and in the fourth year they shall be set free. [...] 122. If any one gives another silver, gold, or anything else to keep, he shall show everything to some witness, draw up a contract, and then hand it over for safe keeping. [...] 125. If any one places his property with another for safe keeping, and there, either through thieves or robbers, his property and the property of the other man be lost, the owner of the house, through whose neglect the loss took place, shall compensate the owner for all that was given to him in charge. But the owner of the house shall try to follow up and recover his property, and take it away from the thief. [...] 129. If a man’s wife is surprised with another man, both shall be tied and thrown into the water, but the husband may pardon his wife. [...] 145. If a man takes a wife, and she bears him no children, and he intends to take another wife; if he takes this second wife, and brings her into the house, this second wife shall not be allowed equality with his wife. [...] 148. If a man takes a wife, and she be seized by disease; if he then desires to take a second wife, he shall not put away his wife, who has been
192 The Best of Just English attacked by disease, but he shall keep her in the house which he has built and support her so long as she lives. [...] 165. If a man gives to one of his sons whom he prefers a field, garden, and house and if later the father dies, and the brothers divide the estate, then they shall first give him the present of his father, and he shall accept it; and the rest of the paternal property shall they divide. [...] 175. If a State slave or the slave of a freed man marries the daughter of a free man, and children are bom, the master of the slave shall have no right to enslave the children of the free. [...] 185. If a man adopts a child as his son, and rears him, this grown son cannot be demanded back again. [...] 192. If a son of a paramour or a prostitute says to his adoptive father or mother: “You are not my father, or my mother”, his tongue shall be cut off. [...] 195. If a son strikes his father, his hands shall be hewn off. [...] 196. If a man puts out the eye of another man, his eye shall be put out. 197. If he breaks another man’s bone, his bone shall be broken. 198. If he puts out the eye of a freed man, or breaks the bone of a freed man, he shall pay one gold mina. 199. If he puts out the eye of a man’s slave, or breaks the bone of a man’s slave, he shall pay one-half of its value. 200. If a man knocks out the teeth of his equal, his teeth shall be knocked out. [...] 202. If any one strikes the body of a man higher in rank than he, he shall receive sixty blows with an ox-whip in public. [...] 205. If the slave of a freed man strikes the body of a freed man, his ear shall be cut off. [...] 229. If a builder builds a house for someone, and does not construct it properly; and the house which he built falls in and kills its owner, then that builder shall be put to death. [...] 282. If a slave says to his master: “You are not my master”; if they convict him, his master shall cut off his ear. The Laws of William the Conqueror (1066—1087) Here is set down what William, king of the English, established in consultation with his magnates after the conquest of England: 1. First that above all things he wishes one God to be revered throughout his whole realm, one faith in Christ to be kept ever inviolate, and peace and security to be preserved between English and Normans.
Базовый курс 193 2. We decree also that every freeman shall affirm by oath and compact that he will be loyal to king William both within and outside England, that he will preserve with him his lands and honur with all fidelity and defend him against his enemies. 3. 1 will, moreover, that all the men I have brought with me, or who have come after me, shall be protected by my peace and shall dwell in quiet. And if any one of them shall be slain, let the lord of his murderer seize him within five days, if he can; but if he cannot, let him pay me 46 marks of silver so long as his substance avails [...] 5. We forbid also that any live cattle shall be bought or sold for money except within cities, and this shall be done before three faithful witnesses [...] 6. It was decreed there that if a Frenchman shall charge an Englishman with perjury or murder or theft or homicide, the Englishman may defend himself, as he shall prefer, either by the ordeal of hot iron or by wager of battle. But if the Englishman be unfirm, let him find another who will take his place. If one of them shall be vanquished, he shall pay a fine of 40 shillings to the king. If an Englishman shall charge a Frenchman and be unwilling to prove his accusation either by ordeal or by wager of battle, the Frenchman shall acquit himself by a valid oath. 7. All shall have and hold the law of the king Edward in respect of their lands and all their possessions, with the addition of those decrees I have ordained for the welfare of the English people. [...] 9. I prohibit the sale of any man by another outside the country on pain of a fine to be paid in full to me. 10.1 also forbid that anyone shall be slain or hanged for any fault, but let his eyes be put out and let him be castrated. And this command shall not be violated under pain of a fine in full to me. The Magna Charta (1215) John, by the grace of God King of England, Lord of Ireland, Duke of Normandy and Aquitaine, and Count of Anjou, to his archbishops, bishops, abbots, earls, barons, justices, foresters, sheriffs, stewards, servants, and to all his officials and loyal subjects, Greeting. KNOW THAT BEFORE GOD, for the health of our soul and those of our ancestors and heirs, to the honour of God, the exaltation of the holy Church, and the better ordering of our kingdom, at the advice of our reverend fathers Stephen, archbishop of Canterbury, primate of all England, and cardinal of the holy Roman Church, Henry archbishop of Dublin, William bishop of London, [...] and other loyal subjects:
194 The Best of Just English (1) FIRST, THAT WE HAVE GRANTED TO GOD, and by this present charter have confirmed for us and our heirs in perpetuity, that the English Church shall be free, and shall have its rights undiminished, and its liberties unimpaired. That we wish this so to be observed, appears from the fact that of our own free will, before the outbreak of the present dispute between us and our barons, we granted and confirmed by charter the freedom of the Church’s elections — a right reckoned to be of the greatest necessity and importance to it — and caused this to be confirmed by Pope Innocent III. This freedom we shall observe ourselves, and desire to be observed in good faith by our heirs in perpetuity. TO ALL FREE MEN OF OUR KINGDOM we have also granted, for us and our heirs forever, all the liberties written out below, to have and to keep for them and their heirs, of us and our heirs: (2) If any earl, baron, or other person that holds lands directly of the Crown, for military service, shall die, and at his death his heir shall be of full age and owe a ‘relief, the heir shall have his inheritance on payment of the ancient scale of ‘relief. [...] (3) But if the heir of such a person is under age and a ward, when he comes of age he shall have his inheritance without ‘relief or fine. (4) The guardian of the land of an heir who is under age shall take from it only reasonable revenues, customary dues, and feudal services. He shall do this without destruction or damage to men or property. If we have given the guardianship of the land to a sheriff, or to any person answerable to us for the revenues, and he commits destruction or damage, we will exact compensation from him, and the land shall be entrusted to two worthy and prudent men of the same ‘fee’, who shall be answerable to us for the revenues, or to the person to whom we have assigned them. If we have given or sold to anyone the guardianship of such land, and he causes destruction or damage, he shall lose the guardianship of it, and it shall be handed over to two worthy and prudent men of the same ‘fee’, who shall be similarly answerable to us. [...] (7) At her husband’s death, a widow may have her marriage portion and inheritance at once and without trouble. She shall pay nothing for her dower, marriage portion, or any inheritance that she and her husband held jointly on the day of his death. She may remain in her husband’s house for forty days after his death, and within this period her dower shall be assigned to her. (8) No widow shall be compelled to marry, so long as she wishes to remain without a husband. But she must give security that she will not marry without royal consent, if she holds her lands of the Crown, or without the consent of whatever other lord she may hold them of.
Базовый курс 195 (9) Neither we nor our officials will seize any land or rent in payment of a debt, so long as the debtor has movable goods sufficient to discharge the debt. A debtor’s sureties shall not be distrained upon so long as the debtor himself can discharge his debt. If, for lack of means, the debtor is unable to discharge his debt, his sureties shall be answerable for it. If they so desire, they may have the debtor’s lands and rents until they have received satisfaction for the debt that they paid for him, unless the debtor can show that he has settled his obligations to them. [...] (12) No ‘scutage’ or ‘aid’ may be levied in our kingdom without its general consent, unless it is for the ransom of our person, to make our eldest son a knight, and (once) to marry our eldest daughter. For these purposes only a reasonable ‘aid’ may be levied. ‘Aids’ from the city of London are to be treated similarly. (13) The city of London shall enjoy all its ancient liberties and free customs, both by land and by water. We also will and grant that all other cities, boroughs, towns, and ports shall enjoy all their liberties and free customs. (14) To obtain the general consent of the realm for the assessment of an ‘aid’ — except in the three cases specified above — or a ‘scutage’, we will cause the archbishops, bishops, abbots, earls, and greater barons to be summoned individually by letter. To those who hold lands directly of us we will cause a general summons to be issued, through the sheriffs and other officials, to come together on a fixed day (of which at least forty days notice shall be given) and at a fixed place. In all letters of summons, the cause of the summons will be stated. When a summons has been issued, the business appointed for the day shall go forward in accordance with the resolution of those present, even if not all those who were summoned have appeared. [...] (17) Ordinary lawsuits shall not follow the royal court around, but shall be held in a fixed place. (18) Inquests of novel disseisin, mort d’ancestor, and darrein presentment shall be taken only in their proper county court. We ourselves, or in our absence abroad our chief justice, will send two justices to each county four times a year, and these justices, with four knights of the county elected by the county itself, shall hold the assizes in the county court, on the day and in the place where the court meets. (19) If any assizes cannot be taken on the day of the county court, as many knights and freeholders shall afterwards remain behind, of those who have attended the court, as will suffice for the administration of justice, having regard to the volume of business to be done.
196 The Best of Just English (20) For a trivial offence, a free man shall be fined only in proportion to the degree of his offence, and for a serious offence correspondingly, but not so heavily as to deprive him of his livelihood. In the same way, a merchant shall be spared his merchandise, and a husbandman the implements of his husbandry, if they fall upon the mercy of a royal court. None of these fines shall be imposed except by the assessment on oath of reputable men of the neighbourhood. (21) Earls and barons shall be fined only by their equals, and in proportion to the gravity of their offence. [...] (23) No town or person shall be forced to build bridges over rivers except those with an ancient obligation to do so. (24) No sheriff, constable, coroner, or other royal officials are to hold lawsuits that should be held by the royal justices. [...] (28) No constable or other royal official shall take com or other movable goods from any man without immediate payment, unless the seller voluntarily offers postponement of this. (29) No constable may compel a knight to pay money for castle-guard if the knight is willing to undertake the guard in person, or with reasonable excuse to supply some other fit man to do it. A knight taken or sent on military service shall be excused from castle-guard for the period of this service. [...] (31) Neither we nor any royal official will take wood for our castle, or for any other purpose, without the consent of the owner. (32) We will not keep the lands of people convicted of felony in our hand for longer than a year and a day, after which they shall be returned to the lords of the ‘fees’ concerned. [...] (35) There shall be standard measures of wine, ale, and com (the London quarter), throughout the kingdom. [...] (38) In future no official shall place a man on trial upon his own unsupported statement, without producing credible witnesses to the truth of it. (39) No free man shall be seized or imprisoned, or stripped of his rights or possessions, or outlawed or exiled, or deprived of his standing in any other way, nor will we proceed with force against him, or send others to do so, except by the lawfill judgement of his equals or by the law of the land. (40) To no one will we sell, to no one deny or delay right or justice. (41) All merchants may enter or leave England unharmed and without fear, and may stay or travel within it, by land or water, for purposes of trade, free from all illegal exactions, in accordance with ancient and lawful customs. This, however, does not apply in time of war to merchants from
Базовый курс 197 a country that is at war with us. Any such merchants found in our country at the outbreak of war shall be detained without injury to their persons or property, until we or our chief justice have discovered how our own merchants are being treated in the country at war with us. If our own merchants are safe they shall be safe too. (42) In future it shall be lawful for any man to leave and return to our kingdom unharmed and without fear, by land or water, preserving his allegiance to us, except in time of war, for some short period, for the common benefit of the realm. People that have been imprisoned or outlawed in accordance with the law of the land, people from a country that is at war with us, and merchants — who shall be dealt with as stated above - are excepted from this provision. [...] (45) We will appoint as justices, constables, sheriffs, or other officials, only men that know the law of the realm and are minded to keep it well. [...] (52) To any man whom we have deprived or dispossessed of lands, castles, liberties, or rights, without the lawful judgement of his equals, we will at once restore these. In cases of dispute the matter shall be resolved by the judgement of the twenty-five barons referred to below in the clause for securing the peace. In cases, however, where a man was deprived or dispossessed of something without the lawful judgement of his equals by our father King Henry or our brother King Richard, and it remains in our hands or is held by others under our warranty, we shall have respite for the period commonly allowed to Crusaders, unless a lawsuit had been begun, or an enquiry had been made at our order, before we took the Cross as a Crusader. On our return from the Crusade, or if we abandon it, we will at once render justice in full. [...] (54) No one shall be arrested or imprisoned on the appeal of a woman for the death of any person except her husband. [...] (56) If we have deprived or dispossessed any Welshmen of lands, liberties, or anything else in England or in Wales, without the lawful judgement of their equals, these are at once to be returned to them. [...] (57) In cases where a Welshman was deprived or dispossessed of anything, without the lawful judgement of his equals, by our father King Henry or our brother King Richard, and it remains in our hands or is held by others under our warranty, we shall have respite for the period commonly allowed to Crusaders, unless a lawsuit had been begun, or an enquiry had been made at our order, before we took the Cross as a Crusader. But on our return from the Crusade, or if we abandon it, we will at once do full justice according to the laws of Wales and the said regions. [...]
198 The Best of Just English (6 0) All these customs and liberties that we have granted shall be observed in our kingdom in so far as concerns our own relations with our subjects. Let all men of our kingdom, whether clergy or laymen, observe them similarly in their relations with their own men. (61 ) SINCE WE HAVE GRANTED ALL THESE THINGS for God, for the better ordering of our kingdom, and to allay the discord that has arisen between us and our barons, and since we desire that they shall be enjoyed in their entirety, with lasting strength, forever, we give and grant to the barons the following security: The barons shall elect twenty-five of their number to keep, and cause to be observed with all their might, the peace and liberties granted and confirmed to them by this charter. If we, our chief justice, our officials, or any of our servants offend in any respect against any man, or transgress any of the articles of the peace or of this security, and the offence is made known to four of the said twenty- five barons, they shall come to us — or in our absence from the kingdom to the chief justice — to declare it and claim immediate redress. If we, or in our absence abroad the chief justice, make no redress within forty days, reckoning from the day on which the offence was declared to us or to him, the four barons shall refer the matter to the rest of the twenty-five barons, who may distrain upon and assail us in every way possible, with the support of the whole community of the land, by seizing our castles, lands, possessions, or anything else saving only our own person and those of the queen and our children, until they have secured such redress as they have determined upon. Having secured the redress, they may then resume their normal obedience to us. [... ] If one of the twenty-five barons dies or leaves the country, or is prevented in any other way from discharging his duties, the rest of them shall choose another baron in his place, at their discretion, who shall be duly sworn in as they were. In the event of disagreement among the twenty-five barons on any matter referred to them for decision, the verdict of the majority present shall have the same validity as a unanimous verdict of the whole twenty- five, whether these were all present or some of those summoned were unwilling or unable to appear. The twenty-five barons shall swear to obey all the above articles faithfully, and shall cause them to be obeyed by others to the best of their power. [.. .] (62) We have remitted and pardoned fully to all men any ill-will, hurt, or grudges that have arisen between us and our subjects, whether clergy or laymen, since the beginning of the dispute. We have in addition
Базовый курс 199 remitted fully, and for our own part have also pardoned, to all clergy and laymen any offences committed as a result of the said dispute between Easter in the sixteenth year of our reign (i.e. 1215) and the restoration of peace. [. ..] (63) IT IS ACCORDINGLY OUR WISH AND COMMAND that the English Church shall be free, and that men in our kingdom shall have and keep all these liberties, rights, and concessions, well and peaceably in their fullness and entirety for them and their heirs, of us and our heirs, in all things and all places forever. Both we and the barons have sworn that all this shall be observed in good faith and without deceit. Witness the above mentioned people and many others. Given by our hand in the meadow that is called Runnymede, between Windsor and Staines, on the fifteenth day of June in the seventeenth year of our reign (i.e. 1215: the new regnal year began on 28 May). The Petition of Right (1628) To the King’s most excellent majesty HUMBLY shew unto our sovereign lord the King, the lords spiritual and temporal, and commons in parliament assembled, That whereas it is declared and enacted by a statute made in the time of the reign of King Edward the First commonly called Statutum de tailagio non concedendo, That no tallage or aid shall be laid or levied by the King or his heirs in this realm, without the good will and assent of the archbishops, bishops, earls, barons, knights, burgesses, and other freemen of the commonalty of this realm; (2) and by authority of parliament holden in the five and twentieth year of the reign of King Edward the Third, it is declared and enacted, That from thenceforth no person should be compelled to make any loans to the King against his will, because such loans were against reason and the franchise of the land; (3) and by other laws of this realm it is provided, That none should be charged by any charge or imposition called a benevolence, nor by such like charge; (4) by which the statutes before mentioned, and other the good laws and statutes of this realm, your subjects have inherited this freedom, That they should not be compelled to contribute to any tax, tallage, aid or other like charge not set by common consent in parliament. II. Yet nevertheless, of late divers commissions directed to sundry commissioners in several counties, with instructions, have issued; by means whereof your people have been in divers places assembled, and required
200 The Best of Just English to lend certain sums of money unto your Majesty, and many of them, upon their refusal so to do, have had an oath administered unto them not warrantable by the laws or statutes of this realm, and have been constrained to become bound to make appearance and give attendance before your privy council and in other places, and others of them have been therefore imprisoned, confined, and sundry other ways molested and disquieted; (2) and divers other charges have been laid and levied upon your people in several counties by lord lieutenants, deputy lieutenants, commissioners for musters, justices of peace and others, by command or direction from your Majesty, or your privy council, against the laws and free customs of the realm. III. And where also by the statute called The Great Charter of the liberties of England, it is declared and enacted, That no freeman may be taken or imprisoned, or be diseased of his freehold or liberties, or his free customs, or be outlawed or exiled, or in manner destroyed, but by the lawful judgment of his peers, or by the law of the land. IV. And in the eight and twentieth year of the reign of King Edward the Third, it was declared and enacted by authority of parliament, That no man of what estate or condition that he be, should be put out of his land or tenements, nor taken, nor imprisoned, nor disherited, nor put to death without being brought to answer by due process of law. V. Nevertheless against the tenor of the said statutes, and other the good laws and statutes of your realm to that end provided, divers of your subjects have of late been imprisoned without any cause shewed; (2) and when for their deliverance they were brought before your justices by your Majesty’s writs of Habeas Corpus, there to undergo and receive as the court should order, and their keepers commanded to certify the causes of their detainer, no cause was certified, but that they were detained by your Majesty’s special command, signified by the lords of your privy council, and yet were returned back to several prisons, without being charged with any thing to which they might make answer according to the law. VI . And whereas of late great companies of soldiers and mariners have been dispersed into divers counties of the realm, and the inhabitants against their wills have been compelled to receive them into their houses, and there to suffer them to sojourn, against the laws and customs of this realm, and to the great grievance and vexation of the people. VII . And whereas also by authority of parliament, in the five and twentieth year of the reign of King Edward the Third, it is declared and enacted, That no man should be forejudged of life or limb against the form of the great charter and the law of the land; (2) and by the said great charter and other the laws and statutes of this your realm, no man ought to be
Базовый курс 201 adjudged to death but by the laws established in this your realm, either by the customs of the same realm, or by acts of parliament; (3) and whereas no offender of what kind soever is exempted from the proceedings to be used, and punishments to be inflicted by the laws and statutes of this your realm: nevertheless of late time divers commissions under your Majesty’s great seal have issued forth, by which certain persons have been assigned and appointed commissioners with power and authority to proceed within the land, according to the justice of martial law, against such soldiers or mariners, or other dissolute persons joining with them, as should commit any murder, robbery, felony, mutiny or other outrage or misdemeanor whatsoever, and by such summary course and order as is agreeable to martial law, and as is used in armies in time of war, to proceed to the trial and condemnation of such offenders, and them to cause to be executed and put to death according to the law martial. VIII . By pretext whereof some of your Majesty’s subjects have been by some of the said commissioners put to death, when and where, if by the laws and statutes of the land they had deserved death, by the same laws and statutes also they might, and by no other ought to have been judged and executed. IX. And also sundry grievous offenders, by colour thereof claiming an exemption, have escaped the punishments due to them by the laws and statutes of this your realm, by reason that divers of your officers and ministers of justice have unjustly refused or forbom to proceed against such offenders according to the same laws and statutes, upon pretence that the said offenders were punishable only by martial law, and by authority of such commissions as aforesaid; (2) which commissions, and all other of like nature, are wholly and directly contrary to the said laws and statutes of this your realm. X. They do therefore humbly pray your most excellent Majesty, that no man hereafter be compelled to make or yield any gift, loan, benevolence, tax, or such-like charge, without common consent by act of parliament; (2) and that none be called to make answer, or take such oath, or to give attendance, or be confined, or otherwise molested or disquieted concerning the same, or for refusal thereof; (3) and that no freeman, in any such manner as is before-mentioned, be imprisoned or detained; (4) and that your Majesty would be pleased to remove the said soldiers and mariners, and that your people may not be so burdened in time to come; (5) and that the aforesaid commissions, for proceeding by martial law, may be revoked and annulled; and that hereafter no commissions of like nature may issue forth to any person or persons whatsoever to be executed as aforesaid, lest by colour of
202 The Best of Just English them any of your Majesty’s subjects be destroyed, or put to death contrary to the laws and franchise of the land. XI. All which they most humbly pray of your most excellent Majesty as their rights and liberties, according to the laws and statutes of this realm; and that your Majesty would also vouchsafe to declare, that the awards, doings and proceedings, to the prejudice of your people in any of the premises, shall not be drawn hereafter into consequence or example; (2) and that your Majesty would be also graciously pleased, for the further comfort and safety of your people, to declare your royal will and pleasure, That in the things aforesaid all your officers and ministers shall serve you according to the laws and statutes of this realm, as they tender the honour of your Majesty, and the prosperity of this kingdom. Qua quidem petitione lecta & plenius intellecta per dictum dominum regem taliterest responsum in pleno parliamento, viz. Soil droit fait come est desire. The English Bill of Rights (1689) An Act Declaring the Rights and Liberties of the Subjects and Settling the Succession of the Crown Whereas the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons assembled at Westminster, lawfully, fully and freely representing all the estates of the people of this realm, did upon the thirteenth day of February in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred eighty-nine present unto their Majesties, then called and known by the names and style of William and Mary, prince and princess of Orange, being present in their proper persons, a certain declaration in writing made by the said Lords and Commons in the words following: Whereas the late King James the Second, by the assistance of diverse evil counsellors, judges and ministers employed by him, did endeavour to subvert and extirpate the Protestant religion and the laws and liberties of this kingdom; By assuming and exercising a power of dispensing with and suspending of laws and the execution of laws without consent of Parliament; By levying money for and to the use of the Crown by pretence of prerogative for other time and in other manner than the same was granted by Parliament; By raising and keeping a standing army within this kingdom in time of peace without consent of Parliament, and quartering soldiers contrary to law;
Базовый курс 203 By causing several good subjects being Protestants to be disarmed at the same time when papists were both armed and employed contrary to law; By violating the freedom of election of members to serve in Parliament; And whereas of late years partial corrupt and unqualified persons have been returned and served on juries in trials, and particularly diverse jurors in trials for high treason which were not freeholders; And excessive bail hath been required of persons committed in criminal cases to elude the benefit of the laws made for the liberty of the subjects; And excessive fines have been imposed; And illegal and cruel punishments inflicted; All which are utterly and directly contrary to the known laws and statutes and freedom of this realm; And whereas the said late King James the Second having abdicated the government and the throne being thereby vacant, his Highness the prince of Orange (whom it hath pleased Almighty God to make the glorious instrument of delivering this kingdom from popery and arbitrary power) did (by the advice of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and divers principal persons of the Commons) cause letters to be written to the Lords Spiritual and Temporal being Protestants, and other letters to the several counties, cities, universities, boroughs and cinque ports, for the choosing of such persons to represent them as were of right to be sent to Parliament, to meet and sit at Westminster upon the two and twentieth day of January in this year one thousand six hundred eighty and eight (old style date), in order to such an establishment as that their religion, laws and liberties might not again be in danger of being subverted, upon which letters elections having been accordingly made [...] And thereupon the said Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons, pursuant to their respective letters and elections, being now assembled in a full and free representative of this nation, taking into their most serious consideration the best means for attaining the ends aforesaid, do in the first place (as their ancestors in like case have usually done) for the vindicating and asserting their ancient rights and liberties declare: That the pretended power of suspending the laws or the execution of laws by regal authority without consent of Parliament is illegal; That levying money for or to the use of the Crown by pretence of prerogative, without grant of Parliament, for longer time, or in other manner than the same is or shall be granted, is illegal;
204 The Best of Just English That it is the right of the subjects to petition the king, and all commitments and prosecutions for such petitioning are illegal; That the raising or keeping a standing army within the kingdom in time of peace, unless it be with consent of Parliament, is against law; That the subjects which are Protestants may have arms for their defence suitable to their conditions and as allowed by law; That election of members of Parliament ought to be free; That the freedom of speech and debates or proceedings in Parliament ought not to be impeached or questioned in any court or place out of Parliament; That excessive bail ought not to be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted; And that for redress of all grievances, and for the amending, strengthening and preserving of the laws, Parliaments ought to be held frequently. And they do claim, demand and insist upon all and singular premises as their undoubted rights and liberties, and that no declarations, judgments, doings or proceedings to the prejudice of the people in any of the said premises ought in any wise to be drawn hereafter into consequence or example; to which demand of their rights they are particularly encouraged by the declaration of his Highness the prince of Orange as being the only means for obtaining a full redress and remedy therein. Having therefore an entire confidence that his said Highness the prince of Orange will perfect the deliverance so far advanced by him, and will still preserve them from the violation of their rights which they have here asserted, and from all other attempts upon their religion, rights and liberties, the said Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons assembled at Westminster do resolve that William and Mary, prince and princess of Orange, be and be declared king and queen of England, France and Ireland and the dominions thereunto belonging, to hold the crown and royal dignity of the said kingdoms and dominions to them, the said prince and princess, during their lives and the life of the survivor to them, and that the sole and full exercise of the regal power be only in and executed by the said prince of Orange in the names of the said prince and princess during their joint lives, and after their deceases the said crown and royal dignity of the same kingdoms and dominions to be to the heirs of the body of the said princess, and for default of such issue to the Princess Anne of Denmark and the heirs of her body, and for default of such issue to the heirs of the body of the said prince of Orange. And the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons do pray the said prince and princess to accept the same accordingly.
Базовый курс 205 Upon which their said Majesties did accept the crown and royal dignity of the kingdoms of England, France and Ireland, and the dominions thereunto belonging, according to the resolution and desire of the said Lords and Commons contained in the said declaration. And thereupon their Majesties were pleased that the said Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons, being the two Houses of Parliament, should continue to sit, and with their Majesties’ royal concurrence make effectual provision for the settlement of the religion, laws and liberties of this kingdom, so that the same for the future might not be in danger again of being subverted, to which the said Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons did agree, and proceed to act accordingly. And the said Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons, seriously considering how it hath pleased Almighty God in his marvellous providence and merciful goodness to this nation to provide and preserve their said Majesties’ royal persons most happily to reign over us upon the throne of their ancestors, for which they render unto him from the bottom of their hearts their humblest thanks and praises, do truly, firmly, assuredly and in the sincerity of their hearts think, and do hereby recognize, acknowledge and declare, that King James the Second having abdicated the government, and their Majesties having accepted the crown and royal dignity as aforesaid, their said Majesties did become, were, are and of right ought to be by the laws of this realm our sovereign liege lord and lady, king and queen of England, France and Ireland and the dominions thereunto belonging, in and to whose princely persons the royal state, crown and dignity of the said realms with all honours, styles, titles, regalities, prerogatives, powers, jurisdictions and authorities to the same belonging and appertaining are most fully, rightfully and entirely invested and incorporated, united and annexed. And for preventing all questions and divisions in this realm by reason of any pretended titles to the crown, and for preserving a certainty in the succession thereof, in and upon which the unity, peace, tranquility and safety of this nation doth under God wholly consist and depend, the said Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons do beseech their Majesties that it may be enacted, established and declared, that the crown and regal government of the said kingdoms and dominions, with all and singular the premises thereunto belonging and appertaining, shall be and continue to their said Majesties and the survivor of them during their lives and the life of the survivor of them, and that the entire, perfect and full exercise of the regal power and government be only in and executed by his Majesty in the names of both their Majesties during their joint lives; and after their deceases the said crown and premises shall be and remain to the heirs of the body of
206 The Best of Just English her Majesty, and for default of such issue to her Royal Highness the Princess Anne of Denmark and the heirs of the body of his said Majesty; and thereunto the said Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons do in the name of all the people aforesaid most humbly and faithfully submit themselves, their heirs and posterities forever, and do faithfully promise that they will stand to, maintain and defend their said Majesties, and also the limitation and succession of the crown herein specified and contained, to the utmost of their powers with their lives and estates against all persons whatsoever that shall attempt anything to the contrary. And whereas it hath been found by experience that it is inconsistent with the safety and welfare of this Protestant kingdom to be governed by a popish prince, or by any king or queen marrying a papist, the said Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons do further pray that it may be enacted, that all and every person and persons that is, are or shall be reconciled to or shall hold communion with the See or Church of Rome, or shall profess the popish religion, or shall marry a papist, shall be excluded and be forever incapable to inherit, possess or enjoy the crown and government of this realm and Ireland and the dominions thereunto belonging or any part of the same, or to have, use or exercise any regal power, authority or jurisdiction within the same; and in all and every such case or cases the people of these realms shall be and are hereby absolved of their allegiance; and the said crown and government shall from time to time descend to and be enjoyed by such person or persons being Protestants as should have inherited and enjoyed the same in case the said person or persons so reconciled, holding communion or professing or marrying as aforesaid were naturally dead. And that every king and queen of this realm who at any time hereafter shall come to and succeed in the imperial crown of this kingdom shall on the first day of the meeting of the first Parliament next after his or her coming to the crown, sitting in his or her throne in the House of Peers in the presence of the Lords and Commons therein assembled, or at his or her coronation before such person or persons who shall administer the coronation oath to him or her at the time of his or her taking the said oath (which shall first happen), make, subscribe and audibly repeat the declaration mentioned in the statute made in the thirtieth year of the reign of King Charles the Second entitled: “An Act for the more effectual preserving the king’s person and government by disabling papists from sitting in either House of Parliament”. But if it shall happen that such king or queen upon his or her succession to the crown of this realm shall be under the age of twelve years, then
Базовый курс 207 every such king or queen shall make, subscribe and audibly repeat the same declaration at his or her coronation or the first day of the meeting of the first Parliament as aforesaid which shall first happen after such king or queen shall have attained the said age of twelve years. All which their Majesties are contented and pleased shall be declared, enacted and established by authority of this present Parliament, and shall stand, remain and be the law of this realm forever; and the same are by their said Majesties, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons in Parliament assembled and by the authority of the same, declared, enacted and established accordingly. II. And be it further declared and enacted by the authority aforesaid, that from and after this present session of Parliament no dispensation by non obstante of or to any statute or any part thereof shall be allowed, but that the same shall be held void and of no effect, except a dispensation be allowed of in such statute, and except in such cases as shall be specially provided for by one or more bill or bills to be passed during this present session of Parliament. III. Provided that no charter or grant or pardon granted before the three and twentieth day of October in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred eighty-nine shall be any ways impeached or invalidated by this Act, but that the same shall be and remain of the same force and effect in law and no other than as if this Act had never been made. The U.S. Declaration of Independence (1776) The Unanimous Declaration of the Thirteen United States of America When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation. — We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on 8 — 9099
208 The Best of Just English such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security. —Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government. The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world. — He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good. — He has forbidden his Governors to pass Laws of immediate and pressing importance, unless suspended in their operation till his Assent should be obtained; and when so suspended, he has utterly neglected to attend to them. — He has refused to pass other Laws for the accommodation of large districts of people, unless those people would relinquish the right of Representation in the Legislature, a right inestimable to them and formidable to tyrants only. — He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and distant from the depository of their public Records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures. — He has dissolved Representative Houses repeatedly, for opposing with manly firmness his invasions on the rights of the people. —He has refused for a long time, after such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected; whereby the Legislative powers, incapable of Annihilation, have returned to the People at large for their exercise; the State remaining in the mean time exposed to all the dangers of invasion from without, and convulsions within. — He has endeavoured to prevent the population of these States; for that purpose obstructing the Laws for Naturalization of Foreigners; refusing to pass others to encourage their migration hither, and raising the conditions of new Appropriations of Lands. — He has obstructed the Administration of Justice, by refusing his Assent to Laws for establishing Judiciary powers. — He has made judges dependent on his Will alone, for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries. — He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harrass our people, and eat out their
Базовый курс 209 substance.—Не has kept among us, in times of peace, Standing Armies, without the Consent of our legislatures.—He has affected to render the Military independent of and superior to the Civil power.—He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws; giving his Assent to their Acts of pretended Legislation: — For quartering large bodies of armed troops among us: — For protecting them, by a mock Trial, from punishment for any Murders which they should commit on the Inhabitants of these States: — For cutting off our Trade with all parts of the world: — For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent:—For depriving us in many cases, of the benefits of Trial by Jury: — For transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences: — For abolishing the free System of English Laws in a neighbouring Province, establishing therein an Arbitrary government, and enlarging its Boundaries so as to render it at once an example and fit instrument for introducing the same absolute rule into these Colonies: — For taking away our Charters, abolishing our most valuable Laws, and altering fundamentally the Forms of our Governments: — For suspending our own Legislatures, and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever. — He has abdicated Government here, by declaring us out of his Protection and waging War against us. — He has plundered our seas, ravaged our Coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people. — He is at this time transporting large Armies of foreign Mercenaries to complete the works of death, desolation and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of Cruelty & perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the Head of a civilized nation. — He has constrained our fellow Citizens taken Captive on the high Seas to bear Arms against their Country, to become the executioners of their friends and Brethren, or to fall themselves by their Hands. — He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavoured to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian Savages, whose known rule of warfare, is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and conditions. In every stage of these Oppressions We have Petitioned for Redress in the most humble terms: Our repeated Petitions have been answered only by repeated injury. A Prince, whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a Tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people. Nor have We been wanting in attentions to our British brethren. We have warned them from time to time of attempts by their legislature to extend an unwarrantable jurisdiction over us. We have reminded them of the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here. We have appealed 8*
210 The Best of Just English to their native justice and magnanimity, and we have conjured them by the ties of our common kindred to disavow these usurpations, which, would inevitably interrupt our connections and correspondence. They too have been deaf to the voice of justice and of consanguinity. We must, therefore, acquiesce in the necessity, which denounces our Separation, and hold them, as we hold the rest of mankind. Enemies in War, in Peace Friends. — We, therefore, the Representatives of the United States of America, in General Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the worldfor the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the Name, and by Authority of the good People of these Colonies, solemnly publish and declare, That these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and Independent States; that they are Absolved from all Allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain, is and ought to be totally dissolved; and that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do. — And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honour. The U.S. Bill of Rights (1791) Amendment I. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. Amendment II. A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed. Amendment III. No Soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, without the consent of the Owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law. Amendment IV. The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. Amendment V. No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand
Базовый курс 211 Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation. Amendment VI. In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed; which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining Witnesses in his favor, and to have the assistance of counsel for his defense. Amendment VII. In Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise re-examined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law. Amendment VIII. Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted. Amendment IX. The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people. Amendment X. The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people. European Prison Rules (1990s) 1. The deprivation of liberty shall be effected in material and moral conditions which ensure respect for human dignity and are in conformity with these rules. 2. The rules shall be applied impartially. There shall be no discrimination on the grounds of race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, birth, economic or other status. The religious beliefs and moral precepts of the group to which a prisoner belongs shall be respected. 3. The purposes of the treatment of persons in custody shall be such as to sustain their health and self-respect and, so far as the length of sentence permits, to develop their sense of responsibility and encourage those attitudes and skills that will assist them to return to society with the best
212 The Best of Just English chance of leading law-abiding and self-supporting lives after their release. [...] 8. In every place where persons are imprisoned a complete and secure record of the following information shall be kept concerning each prisoner received: (a) information concerning the identity of the prisoner; (b) the reasons for commitment and the authority therefore; (c) the day and hour of admission and release. [...] 11.1. In allocating prisoners to different institutions or regimes, due account shall be taken of their judicial and legal situation (untried or convicted prisoner, first offender or habitual offender, short sentence or long sentence), of the special requirements of their treatment, of their medical needs, their sex and age. 11.2. Males and females shall in principle be detained separately, although they may participate together in organised activities as part of an established treatment programme. 11.3. In principle, untried prisoners shall be detained separately from convicted prisoners unless they consent to being accommodated or involved together in organised activities beneficial to them. 11.4. Young prisoners shall be detained under conditions which as far as possible protect them from harmful influences and which take account of the needs peculiar to their age. [...] 14.1. Prisoners shall normally be lodged during the night in individual cells except in cases where it is considered that there are advantages in sharing accommodation with other prisoners. [...] 15. The accommodation provided for prisoners, and in particular all sleeping accommodation, shall meet the requirements of health and hygiene, due regard being paid to climatic conditions and especially the cubic content of air, a reasonable amount of space, lighting, heating and ventilation. [...] 19. All parts of an institution shall be properly maintained and kept clean at all times. [...] 21. For reasons of health and in order that prisoners may maintain a good appearance and preserve their self-respect, facilities shall be provided for the proper care of the hair and beard, and men shall be enabled to shave regularly. 22.1. Prisoners who are not allowed to wear their own clothing shall be provided with an outfit of clothing suitable for the climate and adequate to keep them in good health. Such clothing shall in no manner be degrading or humiliating. [...] 26.1. At every institution there shall be available the services of at least one qualified general practitioner. The medical services should be
Базовый курс 213 organised in close relation with the general health administration of the community or nation. They shall include a psychiatric service for the diagnosis and, in proper cases, the treatment of states of mental abnormality. 26.2. Sick prisoners who require specialist treatment shall be transferred to specialised institutions or to civil hospitals. 27. Prisoners may not be submitted to any experiments which may result in physical or moral injury. 28.1. Arrangements shall be made wherever practicable for children to be bom in a hospital outside the institution. However, unless special arrangements are made, there shall in penal institutions be the necessary staff and accommodation for the confinement and postnatal care of pregnant women. If a child is bom in prison, this fact shall not be mentioned in the birth certificate. 28.2. Where infants are allowed to remain in the institution with their mothers, special provision shall be made for a nursery staffed by qualified persons, where the infants shall be placed when they are not in the care of their mothers. [...] 33. Discipline and order shall be maintained in the interests of safe custody, ordered community life and the treatment objectives of the institution. [...] 36.1 . No prisoner shall be punished except in accordance with the terms of such law or regulation, and never twice for the same act. 36.2 . Reports of misconduct shall be presented promptly to the competent authority who shall decide on them without undue delay. 36.3 . No prisoner shall be punished unless informed of the alleged offence and given a proper opportunity of presenting a defence. 37. Collective punishments, corporal punishment, punishment by placing in a dark cell, and all cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment shall be completely prohibited as punishments for disciplinary offences. [...] 39. The use of chains and irons shall be prohibited. Handcuffs, restraint-jackets and other body restraints shall never be applied as a punishment. They shall not be used except in the following circumstances: (a) if necessary, as a precaution against escape during a transfer, provided that they shall be removed when the prisoner appears before a judicial or administrative authority unless that authority decides otherwise; (b) on medical grounds by direction and under the supervision of the medical officer; (c) by order of the director; if other methods of control fail, in order to protect a prisoner from self-injury, injury to others or to prevent serious
214 The Best of Just English damage to property; in such instances the director shall at once consult the medical officer and report to the higher administrative authority. [...] 41.1. Every prisoner shall on admission be provided with written information about the regulations governing the treatment of prisoners of the relevant category, the disciplinary requirements of the institution, the authorised methods of seeking information and making complaints, and all such other matters as are necessary to understand the rights and obligations of prisoners and to adapt to the life of the institution. 41.2. If a prisoner cannot understand the written information provided, this information shall be explained orally. 42.1. Every prisoner shall have the opportunity every day of making requests or complaints to the director of the institution or the officer authorised to act in that capacity. 42.2. A prisoner shall have the opportunity to talk to, or to make requests or complaints to, an inspector of prisons or to any other duly constituted authority entitled to visit the prison without the director or other members of the staff being present. However appeals against formal decisions may be restricted to the authorised procedures. 42.3. Every prisoner shall be allowed to make a request or complaint, under confidential cover to the central prison administration, the judicial authority or other proper authorities. 42.4. Every request or complaint addressed or referred to a prison authority shall be promptly dealt with and replied to by this authority without undue delay. 43. 1. Prisoners shall be allowed to communicate with their families and, subject to the needs of treatment, security and good order, persons or representatives of outside organisations and to receive visits from these persons as often as possible. [...] 44.1. Prisoners who are foreign nationals should be informed, without delay, of their right to request contact and be allowed reasonable facilities to communicate with the diplomatic or consular representative of the state to which they belong. The prison administration should co-operate fully with such representatives in the interests of foreign nationals in prison who may have special needs. 45. Prisoners shall be allowed to keep themselves informed regularly of the news by reading newspapers, periodicals and other publications, by radio or television transmissions, by lectures or by any similar means as authorised or controlled by the administration. 46. So far as practicable, every prisoner shall be allowed to satisfy the needs of his religious, spiritual and moral life by attending the services
Базовый курс 215 or meetings provided in the institution and having in his possession any necessary books or literature. [...] 48 .1. All money, valuables, clothing and other effects belonging to prisoners which under the regulations of the institution they are not allowed to retain shall on admission to the institution be placed in safe custody. An inventory thereof shall be signed by the prisoner. Steps shall be taken to keep them in good condition. If it has been found necessary to destroy any article, this shall be recorded and the prisoner informed. 48 .2. On the release of the prisoner, all such articles and money shall be returned except insofar as they have been authorised withdrawals of money or the authorised sending of any such property out of the institution, or it has been found necessary on hygienic grounds to destroy any article. The prisoner shall sign a receipt for the articles and money returned. [...] 52. Prison staff shall be continually encouraged through training, consultative procedures and a positive management style to aspire to humane standards, higher efficiency and a committed approach to their duties. 53. The prison administration shall regard it as an important task continually to inform public opinion of the roles of the prison system and the work of the staff so as to encourage public understanding of the importance of their contribution to society. [...] 56. All members of the personnel shall be expected at all times so to conduct themselves and perform their duties as to influence the prisoners for good by their example and to command their respect. 57. So far as possible the personnel shall include a sufficient number of specialists such as psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, teachers, trade, physical education and sports instructors. [...] 63.1. Staff of the institutions shall not use force against prisoners except in self-defence or in cases of attempted escape or active or passive physical resistance to an order based on law or regulations. Staff who have recourse to force must use no more than is strictly necessary and must report the incident immediately to the director of the institution. [...] 64. Imprisonment is by the deprivation of liberty a punishment in itself. The conditions of imprisonment and the prison regimes shall not, therefore, except as incidental to justifiable segregation or the maintenance of discipline, aggravate the suffering inherent in this. [...] 68. As soon as possible after admission and after a study of the personality of each prisoner with a sentence of a suitable length, a programme of treatment in a suitable institution shall be prepared in the light of the knowledge obtained about individual needs, capacities and dispositions, especially proximity to relatives. [...]
216 The Best of Just English 70.1. The preparation of prisoners for release should begin as soon as possible after reception in a penal institution. Thus, the treatment of prisoners should emphasize not their exclusion from the community but their continuing part in it. Community agencies and social workers should, therefore, be enlisted wherever possible to assist the staff of the institution in the task of social rehabilitation of the prisoners particularly maintaining and improving the relationships with their families, with other persons and with the social agencies. Steps should be taken to safeguard, to the maximum extent compatible with the law and the sentence, the rights relating to civil interests, social security rights and other social benefits of prisoners. [...] 71 .1. Prison work should be seen as a positive element in treatment, training and institutional management. 71 .2. Prisoners under sentence may be required to work, subject to their physical and mental fitness as determined by the medical officer. [...] 71 .4. So far as possible the work provided shall be such as will maintain or increase the prisoner’s ability to earn a normal living after release. 71 .5. Vocational training in useful trades shall be provided for prisoners able to profit thereby and especially for young prisoners. [...] 77. A comprehensive education programme shall be arranged in every institution to provide opportunities for all prisoners to pursue at least some of their individual needs and aspirations. Such programmes should have as their objectives the improvement of the prospects for successful social resettlement, the morale and attitudes of prisoners and their self-respect. 78. Education should be regarded as a regime activity that attracts the same status and basic remuneration within the regime as work, provided that it takes place in normal working hours and is part of an authorised individual treatment programme. 79. Special attention should be given by prison administrations to the education of young prisoners, those of foreign origin or with particular cultural or ethnic needs. [...] 82. Every institution shall have a library for the use of all categories of prisoners, adequately stocked with a wide range of both recreational and instructional books, and prisoners shall be encouraged to make full use of it. Wherever possible the prison library should be organised in co- operation with community library services. [...] 88. In the case of those prisoners with longer sentences, steps should be taken to ensure a gradual return to life in society. This aim may be achieved, in particular, by a pre-release regime organised in the same institution or in another appropriate institution, or by conditional release
Базовый курс 217 under some kind of supervision combined with effective social support. 89.2. Steps must be taken to ensure that on release prisoners are provided, as necessary, with appropriate documents and identification papers, and assisted in finding suitable homes and work to go to. They should also be provided with immediate means of subsistence, be suitably and adequately clothed having regard to the climate and season, and have sufficient means to reach their destination. 89.3. The approved representatives of the social agencies or services should be afforded all necessary access to the institution and to prisoners with a view to making a full contribution to the preparation for release and after-care programme of the prisoner. [...] 92.1. Untried prisoners shall be allowed to inform their families of their detention immediately and given all reasonable facilities for communication with family and friends and persons with whom it is in their legitimate interest to enter into contact. [...] 100.1. Persons who are found to be insane should not be detained in prisons and arrangements shall be made to remove them to appropriate establishments for the mentally ill as soon as possible.
PART II PHILOSOPHERS OF LAW Sir Thomas More, 1478—1535 Sir Thomas More was an English statesman and writer, known for his religious stance against King Henry VIII that cost him his life. More was bom in London and was educated at one of London’s best schools. He later spent two years in the University of Oxford, mastering Latin and undergoing a thorough drilling in formal logic. Among his important thoughts was that the reasons for crime were to be found in economic and social conditions. He believed that if people lived in a more just and humane society they would behave better. He also thought that punishment should be sensible and that people found guilty should be made to work for the good of the community. His views were far ahead of the time, so that it was only in later centuries that his book Utopia was really understood. More’s Utopia describes a pagan and communist city-state in which the institutions and policies are entirely governed by reason. The order and dignity of such a state provided a notable contrast with the unreasonable policy of Christian Europe, divided by self-interest and greed for power and riches, which More described in book 1, written in England in 1516. Among the topics discussed by More in Utopia were penology, state- controlled education, religious pluralism, divorce, euthanasia, and women’s rights. The resulting demonstration of his learning, invention, and wit established his reputation as one of the foremost Humanists. Soon translated into most European languages, Utopia became the ancestor of a new literary genre, the Utopian romance. More’s History of King Richard III, written in Latin and in English between about 1513 and 1518, is the first masterpiece of English historiography. Though never finished, it influenced succeeding historians. William Shakespeare is indebted to More for his portrait of the tyrant. More attracted the attention of King Henry VIII. Henry VIII made More one of his favourites and often sought his company for philosophical conversations. More became Lord Chancellor in 1529; he was the first layman to hold the post. His fortunes changed, however, when he refused to support Henry’s request for a divorce from Catherine of Aragon.
Базовый курс 219 As a strict Roman Catholic he disapproved of Henry VIII’s attempt to break away from the church in Rome and set up his own Church of England. For failing to accept Henry as the head of the English church he was tried for treason in 1535 and beheaded at the Tower of London. In 1935 he was made a saint by the Roman Catholic Church. John Locke, 1632—1704 The ideas and writings of the seventeenth-century English philosopher John Locke deeply influenced the political outlook of the American colonists. Locke spelled out his political ideas in two Treatises on Government, first published in 1690. His writings were widely read and discussed in both Europe and America. Locke’s ideas seemed to fit the American colonial experience. Colonial leaders such as Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison regarded these ideas as political truth. Locke’s ideas became so influential that they have been called the “textbook of the American Revolution.” Locke reasoned that all people were bom free, equal, and independent. They possessed natural rights to life, liberty, and property at the time when they lived in a state of nature, before governments were formed. People contracted among themselves to form governments to protect their natural rights. Locke argued that if a government failed to protect these natural rights, the people could change that government. The people had not agreed to be governed by tyrants who threatened their rights but by rulers who defended their rights. Locke’s ideas were revolutionary in an age when monarchs still claimed they had God-given absolute powers. Locke denied that people were bom with an obligation to obey their rulers. Rather, in his second Treatise on Civil Government, Locke insisted that freedom of people under government is to have a standing rule to live by, common to everyone of that society, and made by the legislative power vested in it. Government, then, was legitimate only as long as people continued to consent to it. Both the U.S. Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, written nearly a century after Locke, reflected Locke’s revolu- tionary ideas. Charles-Louis de Secondat Montesquieu, 1689—1755 Montesquieu is a French political philosopher whose major work appeared under the title The Spirit of Laws. It consisted of two volumes,
220 The Best of Just English comprising 31 books in 1,086 pages. It is one of the greatest works in the history of political theory and in the history of jurisprudence. Its author had acquainted himself with all previous schools of thought but identified himself with none. Of the multiplicity of subjects treated by Montesquieu, none remained unadorned. His treatment of the three was particularly memorable. The first of these is his classification of governments. Abandoning the classical divisions of his predecessors into monarchy, aristocracy, and democracy, Montesquieu produced his own analysis and assigned to each form of government an animating principle: the republic, based on virtue; the monarchy, based on honour; and despotism, based on fear. His definitions show that this classification rests not on the location of political power but on the government’s manner of conducting policy; it involves a historical and not a narrow descriptive approach. The second of his most noted arguments is the theory of the separation of powers. Dividing political authority into the legislative, executive, and judicial powers, he asserted that, in the state that most effectively promotes liberty, these three powers must be confided to different individuals or bodies, acting independently. It at once became perhaps the most important piece of political writing of the 18th century. Though its accuracy has in more recent times been disputed, in its own century it was admired and held authoritative; it inspired the Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Constitution of the United States. The third of Montesquieu’s most celebrated doctrines is that of the political influence of climate. Basing himself on the experience of his travels, and on experiments, he stressed the effect of climate, primarily thinking of heat and cold, on the physical frame of the individual, and, as a consequence, on the intellectual outlook of society. According to Montesquieu, other factors (laws, religion, and maxims of government) are of a non-physical nature, and their influence, compared with that of climate, grows as civilization advances. After the book was published, praise came to Montesquieu from the most varied headquarters. The Scottish philosopher David Hume wrote from London that the work would win the admiration of all the ages; an Italian friend spoke of reading it in an ecstasy of admiration; the Swiss scientist Charles Bonnet said that Montesquieu had discovered the laws of the intellectual world as Newton had those of the physical world. The philosophers of the Enlightenment accepted him as one of their own, as indeed he was. His fame was now worldwide. But renown lay lightly on his shoulders. His affability and modesty are commented on by all who
Базовый курс 221 met him. Не was a faithful friend, kind and helpful to young and unestablished men of letters, witty, though absent-minded, in society. Voltaire, 1694—1778 Voltaire was the most influential figure of the French Enlightenment. Considered by his contemporaries as the greatest poet and dramatist of the century, he is now better known for his essays and tales. His precocious wit, his upbringing among a group of libertines, and his predilection for aristocratic circles were to mark his life, as his classical education by the Jesuits was to form his taste. For writing some satirical verses, he spent a year imprisoned in the Bastille (1717—18), after which he adopted the name Voltaire. Subsequently he quarrelled with a nobleman, was returned briefly to the Bastille in April 1726, then went into exile in England for three years. There he absorbed the lessons of British liberties, deism, and literature. Then, for safety, he moved (1759) to Ferney, just inside the French border, which remained his home until his triumphal return to Paris in February 1778. Voltaire was pre-eminent in almost every genre. He catapulted to fame in 1718 with Oedipus. His historical works —History of Charles XII, Age of Louis XIV, Essay on Manners — are landmarks of historiography. Most of all, however, Voltaire was, and remains, famous as a philosopher, a fighter for reform. His ideas were expressed in poems, tracts, pamphlets, and tales, which are still universally read and admired. His philosophical works include the Treatise on Metaphysics (1734), The Disaster of Lisbon (1756), and the influential Philosophical Dictionary, a witty compendium of his ideas. Finally, Voltaire was the most prolific correspondent of the century. His thousands of letters portray his life and personality, reflect his wit and ideas, and describe his times. Voltaire was the leader and chief organizer and propagandist of the reformist group called Philosophers. He strove for collaboration with the more radical of the encyclopaedists, such as Diderot, but in 1770 the two groups could not agree on the issue of atheism or on tactics. Although Voltaire is known principally as a reformer and teller of talcs, he was one of the originators of modem historiography. Although his use of history for non-historical purposes — propaganda, debunking, philosophical explanations — were justly criticized, he demanded authentic documentation and broke with tradition in his conception of history as the history of civilisation social, economic, and cultural, as well as political.
222 The Best of Just English Jeremy Bentham, 1748—1832 The philosopher and jurist Jeremy Bentham was bom in London on the 15th of February 1748. He proved to be something of a child prodigy: while still a toddler he was discovered sitting at his father’s desk reading a multi-volume history of England, and he began to study Latin at the age of three. At twelve, he was sent to Queen’s College, Oxford, by his father, a prosperous attorney, who decided that Jeremy would follow him into the law, feeling quite sure that his brilliant son would one day be Lord Chancellor of England. Bentham, however, soon became disillusioned with the law, especially after hearing the lectures of the leading authority of the day, Sir William Blackstone. Instead of practicing the law, he decided to write about it, and he spent his life criticising the existing law and suggesting ways for its improvement. His father’s death in 1792 left him financially independent, and for nearly forty years he lived quietly in Westminster, producing between ten and twenty sheets of manuscript a day, even when he was in his eighties. For those who have never read a line of Bentham, he will always be associated with the doctrine of Utilitarianism and his attempts to make the punishment more precisely fit the crime. This, however, was only his starting point for a radical critique of society, which aimed to test the usefulness of existing institutions, practices and beliefs against an objective evaluative standard. He was an outspoken advocate of law reform, a pugnacious critic of established political doctrines like natural law, and the first to produce a utilitarian justification for democracy. He also had much to say on subjects as diverse as prison reform, religion, poor relief and international law. A visionary far ahead of his time, he advocated universal suffrage. By the 1820s Bentham had become a widely respected figure, both in Britain and in other parts of the world. His ideas were to influence greatly the reforms of public administration made during the nineteenth century, and his writings are still at the centre of academic debate, especially as regards social policy and legal positivism and welfare economics.
PART III NOTORIOUS CRIMINALS Cain According to the Bible, Cain was the first murderer. The story is told in Genesis, Chapter Four. He was a tiller of the soil and his brother Abel was a shepherd. They were both sons of Adam and Eve. When the Lord accepted Abel’s offerings and rejected those of Cain, he was very “wroth and his countenance fell”. He fell upon his brother Abel and killed him. When the Lord asked him where his brother was, he asked the famous question: “Am I my brother’s keeper?”. For his crime, he was banished to be a wanderer over the earth, but to prevent him from being killed, God put a mark upon him to protect him. According to the Bible, he went to live in the land of Nod, east of Eden. Marcus Junius Brutus, 85—42 B.C., Gaius Longinus Cassius, d. 42 B.C. These two Roman generals were the leaders of conspiracy to murder Julius Caesar, the man who invaded Britain and was one of the greatest Roman generals. Both had distinguished careers, having been promised governorships by Caesar. One was even a personal friend of Caesar’s but was convinced by the other that Caesar, who by then was dictator of Rome, was a tyrant who must be got rid of. On the Ides (15th) of March 44 B.C. Caesar was stabbed to death on the steps of the Capitol, the senate house of Rome, both men taking part in the murder. But, the conspiracy then began to crumble and the two generals fled to Macedonia to raise an army. They were defeated at the battle of Philip by Caesar’s nephew Octavian and Roman military hero Mark Anthony. After the battle one committed suicide, while the other ordered his servant to kill him. Caligula, A.D. 12-41 This Roman Emperor will always be remembered for his great cruelty and love of bloodshed. On one occasion, at one of the famous games, at
224 The Best of Just English which the gladiators performed, he is said to have remarked that he wished that the Roman people had only one neck so that he could kill them all with one blow. There is little doubt this his extreme cruelty was due to madness, as he started his reign in a very reasonable way. However, after a strange illness, he began to act as though insane and declared himself a god and even gave his horse a high public office. In the end he was murdered by a member of his own bodyguard on 24th January A.D. 41. Colonia Agrippina, A.D. 16—59 As Roman empress, married to the emperor Claudius, she is remembered mostly for having poisoned him in A.D. 54 in order for her son, Nero to take the throne. The sister of Caligula and a cruel and ambitious woman, she is said to have murdered her previous husband as well. In the end she met her death on the orders of Nero, who was tired of being ruled by his mother. The city of her birth on the Rhine was named Colonia Agrippinensis in her honour and is now called Cologne. Guy Fawkes, 1570—1606 Guy Fawkes is the best known member of the gang which planned Gunpowder Plot of 1605. The originators of the plot were Robert Catesby, Thomas Winter, Thomas Percy and John Wright. Fawkes was only brought in later by Catesby, who knew of his reputation for courage. All were Roman Catholics and their plan was to destroy James I and his Protestant Parliament by blowing them up. Percy rented a house next to Parliament and later the cellar below the House of Lords. There Fawkes hid thirty-six barrels of gunpowder, covering them with wood and coal. The plot was discovered when one of the conspirators sent a letter to Lord Monteagle in October 1605 asking him not to attend the opening of Parliament on 5th November. Suspicions were aroused and on the night of 4th November Fawkes was arrested in the cellar. He had been given the task of lighting the fuse to set off the explosion. Tortured, he refused to give the names of his fellow conspirators until they had either been killed or captured. He was executed by hanging on 31st January 1606. Captain William Kidd, 1645—1701 A privateer was a private person (a civilian not in the navy) who was given a commission to attack the King’s enemies at sea and traditionally
Базовый курс 225 there was always a thin line dividing privateering from piracy. In 1695 William Kidd, a Scotsman who had emigrated to Boston, Massachusetts, was given a commission by William III to arrest all pirates and also a commission to act as a privateer against the French. He fitted out the brig Adventure and in 1697 sailed to Madagascar, the lair of many pirates at that time. But instead of attacking the pirates, he joined forces with them and began capturing merchant ships and plundering local trade. He deserted his ship and went to New York, offering treasure to the governor and claiming to be able to explain his actions. However, he was arrested and sent to England for trial where he was hanged in 1701. About 14,000 pounds of treasure were recovered from his ship and from a hiding place near Long Island, though there is still supposed to be a lot of Captain Kidd’s treasure waiting to be found. Alessandro Cagliostro, 1743—1795 Count Cagliostro’s real name was Guiseppe Balsamo, and he became famous as a charlatan or confidence trickster, as we would call him today. As a young man he learned a little about chemistry and medicine and then left Sicily in 1769. After getting some knowledge of the supernatural, he appeared in Malta as the great Count Cagliostro, specialist in medicine, magic and all kinds of strange arts. He was soon fleecing the rich of Europe, selling them an elixir of youth and love potions. Finally he was condemned to death in Rome for setting up a secret society and died in prison at San Leone. Billy the Kid (William Bonny), 1860—1881 Billy the Kid was a legend in the Wild West as a cattle rustler and murderer. Slim and fair, Billy was bom in New York but soon moved to New Mexico. He was apprenticed to a blacksmith but found this boring, so he shot the smith and became a cowboy. At first he worked for John Chisholm, who was fighting a range war in the Pecos Valley. He quarrelled with Chisholm and joined, a band of cattle rustlers, killing as many of
226 The Best of Just English Chisholm’s men as he could in the process. Pat Garrett was elected sheriff to capture Billy the Kid. He did this, but Billy shot two deputies and escaped from his cell just before he was due to be hanged. He was caught by Garrett two months and five murders later and shot dead in a gunfight. He was said to have shot twenty-one men, but in fact he probably only killed three. Jack the Ripper “Jack the Ripper” was a mysterious killer who terrorised the East End of London in the autumn of 1888. His victims, all women, were killed by having their throats cut, and in many cases the bodies were savagely mutilated as well. The number of victims is said to be between four and fourteen, though police authorities generally thought that only five murders were definitely the work of the Ripper. The Ripper was never caught, and his identity remains a mystery. All kinds of people have been suggested as possible Rippers, including the Duke of Clarence and even a barrister. Roy Bean, d. 1903 In the days when the western part of the USA was known as Wild West law was upheld by very rough and ready men. ‘Judge’ Bean, as he called himself, was one of the most colourful of the lawmen. As a young man he had been a slaver, driven an ammunition truck in the war against Mexico, smuggled cotton and been tried. He became famous as Justice of the Peace in a town called Vinegarroon. Here, in a saloon called the Jersey Lilly — so named after the actress Lily Langtree of whom he was a fan — he held the court. His justice was as rough as the people he tried and he built up an enormous reputation, so that many tales were told about him. One is that he decided on one occasion that a man accused of murdering a Chinaman might call on his tough friends to make trouble for the judge. Looking through his law books he announced that he could not find anywhere that it said that you must not kill a Chinaman! Butch Cassidy, 1866—1910 and the Sundance Kid, d.1910 Butch Cassidy, whose real name was Robert Leroy Parker, was the leader of a gang of American outlaws called the Wild Bunch who operated mainly from a secure hideout in Wyoming Territory called Hole in the Wall. Other members of the gang were the Sundance Kid (real name Harry
Базовый курс 227 Longbaugh), Bill ‘News’ Carver, Ben Kilpatrick and Harvey Logan. The Wild Bunch rustled cattle, held up banks and robbed trains, all with varied success. On one occasion they stole $40,000 in notes that were so new that they had not been signed, and their clumsy attempts to forge the signatures failed miserably. Having made things too hot for themselves by robbing the Union Pacific railway rather too frequently, in 1902 Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid moved to South America accompanied by pretty schoolteacher Etta Place. This combination carried out a number of robberies, before the two outlaws were ambushed and killed in a gunfight with the Bolivian army in 1910. However, rumours persist that either one or both men returned to the USA and lived on peacefully to die of old age. The film of their life and death, 'Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid\ starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford, managed to catch the flavour of criminal exploits almost perfectly. Mata Hari (born Gertruda Margarete Zelle), 1876—1917 Mata Hari, who was executed by a firing squad in France in October 1917, is probably the most famous spy of all time. She is renowned for her beauty, her numerous military lovers, her provocative oriental dancing, and, above all, her espionage. Yet in fact, she was not oriental, or even a spy. Mata Hari was a stage name adopted by a plump middle- aged Dutch divorcee, named Mrs. Margaretha MacLeod, who had left her alcoholic Scottish husband and opted to become a dancer in Europe. The evidence of her alleged espionage on behalf of the German Kaiser is based merely on her being mistaken for a well-known German agent Clara Benedix, by the British in November 1916. In that month Mrs. MacLeod was arrested in Falmouth, Cornwall, on board of the ship Hollandia while she was on her way to the Netherlands. The police released her when they realized the mistake. Later she was arrested in France and charged with having been in
228 The Best of Just English contact with German intelligence officers in Madrid (though she had never even been there). At her trial in Paris her lurid life-style was used to damning effect. It was only in 1963, when the secret files relating to her case were released, that the legend was reassessed. Most historians now think that, far from being a spy, Mata Hari was simply an innocent scapegoat— shot because the French government wanted to cover up its military ineptitude by fabricating an all-powerful ring of German agents. Captain Alfred Dreyfus, 1859—1935 The name of Dreyfus is one of the most famous in the history of espionage. He was a French army officer of Jewish ancestry who in 1894 was sentenced to life imprisonment for selling military secrets to the Germans. The high command of the French army was strongly anti-Jewish and Dreyfus was a convenient scapegoat. His court martial was carried out as if he had already been found guilty. To serve his sentence he was sent to Devil’s Island, the French prison colony off the coast of Guiana. In 1896 an army intelligence officer found proof that Dreyfus was innocent, but the army chief of staff refused to accept it. Support for Dreyfus grew and in 1898 the writer Emile Zola published a famous open letter, ‘J’accuse'', calling for his case to be reopened. At last, the army brought Dreyfus back from Devil’s Island and retried him in 1899. To the amazement of everyone, this second court martial again found him guilty. Such was the public fury that the President pardoned Dreyfus immediately, but it was not until 1906 that his name was fully cleared, and the real traitor exposed. Lizzie Borden, 1860—1927 Lizzie Borden is known worldwide through a poem which was written about her. It goes: Lizzie Borden took an axe And gave her father forty whacks. When she saw what she had done, He gave her mother forty-one. This cruel verset refers to the fact that Lizzie Borden was accused of having killed her father and stepmother by chopping them to pieces with an axe at their home in Fall River, Massachusetts, in 1892. She was tried for the two murders and acquitted, but the trial has become a legend, and many books have been written about it.
Базовый курс 229 Dr. Hawley Harvey Crippen, 1882—1910 Crippen is famous as a murderer mainly because he was the first one to be caught by the use of wireless telegraphy. He was an American-born doctor who settled in London in 1900 with his wife Cora who had theatrical ambitions and used the stage name Belle Elmore. In 1910 Crippen’s wife vanished under suspicious circumstances and when the house was searched her dismembered body was discovered buried in a cellar. She had been poisoned. Meanwhile Crippen had fled with his girlfriend Ethel Le Neve, who was disguised as a boy. They thought that they were safe once they boarded the liner Mon trose for America, but the authorities used the newly invented wireless to pass on a warning to the ship’s captain. Shortly afterwards “Mr. Robinson” and his ‘son’ were recognised and Crippen and Le Neve were arrested in New York and returned to Britain. Largely due to Crippen’s insistence that she knew nothing of the crime, Ethel Le Neve was freed, but the mild, inoffensive looking little man was hanged at Pentonville prison on 23rd November 1910. Bonnie and Clyde (Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow), d.1934 In the days of the Depression in America after 1929, these two young people made a great name for themselves robbing stores and committing murders quite casually and often for the sheer fun of it. Bonnie Parker was a waitress when she met Clyde Barrow, and she ended up a legendary figure known for her love of red dresses, cigars and firearms. Working in the southern states of the USA they left behind a trail of destruction. On several occasions they were trapped by the police, but seemed to bear a charmed life and escaped even through a hail of bullets. On one occasion they held up a prison farm killing a guard and helping a friend to escape. Huge rewards were by then offered for their capture. Following a tip-off, the police finally ambushed Bonnie
230 The Best of Just English and Clyde at a crossroads and killed them in the gunfight that followed. In 1967 a film was made of their exploits, which resulted in the two becoming almost cult figures, and a pop song was written about them, which became a best-selling record. ‘Ma’ Barker, d. 1935 ‘Ma’ Barker’s gang was mostly composed of her own four sons, and she led them to criminal fame. She was never arrested, but her sons often were. ‘Ma’ would appear in court and protest their innocence or raise bail. By the time the gang was cleared up by the FBI it had been responsible for the deaths of four policemen, a civilian and one of their own number who talked too much. The Barkers hit the big time when they started kidnapping rich men for ransom, but this increased the pressure by police and the FBI on the gang and its members had to split up. When Arthur Barker was captured, ‘Ma’s hideout in Florida was revealed. The FBI’s G-men surrounded the house and called on ‘Ma’ Barker and her son Fred to surrender. “To hell with all of you”, she replied and opened fire. The FBI used tear gas, but the gunfight continued until both ‘Ma’ Barker and her son were dead. Bruno Hauptmann, d. 1936 Kidnapping, which means the taking of a person — sometimes a child — by force and asking the family, friends or even employers of the person for ransom in return for his or her release, has always been regarded as a serious crime. One of the best known kidnappings of modem times took
Базовый курс 231 place in America in March 1932, when the nineteen-months old son of American aviator Colonel Charles Lindbergh was taken from his New Jersey home while he was asleep in the nursery. Charles Lindbergh was the first man to fly the Atlantic non-stop single-handed in 1927 and a great American hero. A large sum of money - $50,000 — was demanded by the kidnapper and this was eventually paid over by Lindbergh in April. However, the boy had already been murdered and his body buried under leaves and twigs in a wood only four miles from the Lindberghs home. As a result of the Lindbergh case the crime of kidnapping was made a Federal instead of just a State offence with the passing of the “Lindbergh Act” (Federal Kidnapping Act) in 1933. This allowed the FBI to become involved in the search for kidnappers and their victims, making an arrest so much more likely. The kidnapper of Lindbergh’s child, Bruno Hauptmann, a carpenter from New York, was finally arrested in September 1934 after a massive search, and executed in 1936. The publicity which followed the kidnapping was so great that the Lindberghs eventually left America to live in England and continued to do so until 1939. Hans Van Meegeren, 1889—1947 Van Meegeren will go down in history as one of the greatest of all art forgers. His work fooled all the experts. Before the Second World War Van Meegeren was a struggling artist in Holland who gradually became embittered by the fact that his own painting was not appreciated. He therefore painted a number of works in the style of Vermeer, which were accepted as the real thing. The six ‘Vermeers’ he painted were sold for huge sums of money: five to Dutch museums and the sixth to Hermann Goering, the German Nazi leader, for 165,000 pounds during the war. When the war was over, the sale of the picture to Goering was traced to Van Meegeren, who was accused of collaborating with the Germans. To save himself, Van Meegeren confessed to having forged the painting, but had to paint another ‘Vermeer’ while the experts watched, before anyone would believe him. He was tried in 1947 on a charge of forgery and sentenced to one year in prison. Six weeks later he died, having finally achieved fame as a painter. Alphonse Capone, 1899—1947 ‘АГ Capone is possibly the best-known of all American gangsters, though by no means the most important. His home ground was Chicago.
232 The Best of Just English He was brought into the racket by Johnny Torrio and Torrio’s uncle “Big Jim” Colosimo. Capone seized his chance when Prohibition was declared in 1920, which made the manufacture and sale of alcohol illegal in America. He soon rose to control a large part of the illegal liquor market in Chicago and the Middle West. A fierce and vicious man, he was responsible for many gangland killings, including the 1929 St. Valentine’s Day Massacre, in which seven rival “bootleggers” (men selling illicit liquor) were trapped by gunmen dressed as police and machine-gunned to death. He was imprisoned in 1931 on income tax charges, became a model prisoner and was released in 1939. ‘Lucky’ Luciano, 1897—1962 ‘Lucky’ Luciano, so called because he led a charmed life and avoided assassination, was one of the most powerful leaders of the Mafia in the USA. Having risen to be a trusted lieutenant of Joe Masseria (‘Joe the Boss’), he had him killed in 1931. This was the first step Luciano was to make in getting rid of the old guard of the Mafia, to make way for younger men like himself. In the reorganisation that followed Luciano became capo or head of one of the five New York Mafia ‘Families’. He became the most powerful chieftain in the Mafia, and formed alliances with gangsters of other national groups such as the Jews and Irish-Americans. In 1936 he was sent to prison but paroled in 1945 because of his and the Mafia’s secret work for the U.S. government during the Second World War. Afterwards he was deported to Italy, from where he ran the European end of the Mafia’s drugs operation. Frank Costello, 1891—1973 Known by American newspapers as ‘the Prime Minister of Crime’, Costello was bom in Italy and came to America in 1896. Though not well educated, he had a very good brain, and rose steadily through the ranks of the Mafia until in 1936 he took over ‘Lucky’ Luciano’s position as capo di
Базовый курс 233 capore, or head of all the Family heads. He avoided violence whenever possible, but was not afraid to use it where necessary. By 1943 he virtually owned New York, appointing city officials, judges and even mayors. He was jailed in 1954 on income tax charges and the resulting publicity made him less valuable to Meyer Lansky’s National Crime Syndicate, and he lost much of his power. An attempt was made on his life in 1957, but he was then allowed to retire in peace. George Blake, b.1922 Bom in Holland, he was a famous traitor and Russian spy. During the Second World War, he was a member of the Dutch resistance until he escaped to England, joined the Navy and changed his name to Blake. He joined the intelligence services and was captured in Korea while serving in the British Embassy in Seoul. Blake was released in 1953 but had been secretly converted to communism while a prisoner. He then served as an agent for MI6 and as a double agent for the Russians, first in Berlin and later in Britain. In 1960 he was arrested and sentenced in 1961 to no less than forty-two years in prison. But in 1967, helped by a released fellow- prisoner, he made a daring escape from Wormwood Scrubs prison and was smuggled out to Moscow by the Russians. Lee Harvey Oswald, 1940—1963 In 1963 the world was shaken by the news that President Kennedy had been assassinated in Dallas, Texas, while driving from airport. The man arrested for this terrible crime was Lee Harvey Oswald. After service in the U.S. Marine Corps, Oswald went to the Soviet Union for a time and married a Russian girl. On returning to the United States he was for a time involved with Cuban revolutionary elements. On 22nd November 1963 he is said to have taken a rifle into the Texas Book Depository in Dallas, where he worked, and shot President Kennedy and Governor Conally of Texas as they were driving past. Conally survived, but the President died soon afterwards. Oswald tried to escape, shooting a policeman who tried to stop him. He was caught, but was later shot dead before he could be brought to trial by the night-club owner Jack Ruby, who had got into the police station. The Warren Commission, which investigated the assassination, stated that Oswald had acted alone, but many people do not agree, and there are still a great many questions concerning the killing left unanswered.
234 The Best of Just English Joseph Stalin, (Joseph Vissarionovich Djugashvili), 1879—1953 The 20th century generated an outgrowth of state terrorism which implies the systematic use of terror by the state against its own people to attain a political objective. It was exceedingly developed in Russia under the Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin who during the quarter of a century preceding his death in 1953 allegedly exercised greater political power than any other figure in history. Stalin industrialized the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, forcibly collectivized its agriculture, consolidated his position by intensive police terror, and extended Soviet controls to include a belt of eastern European states. Nevertheless it was he who led the Red Army to defeat the Nazi in World War II. Chief architect of Soviet totalitarianism and a skilled but phenomenally ruthless organizer, he destroyed the remnants of individual freedom and failed to promote individual prosperity, yet he created a mighty military- industrial complex and led the Soviet Union into the nuclear age. Stalin’s biography was long obscured by a mendacious Soviet-propagated ‘legend’ exaggerating his prowess as a heroic Bolshevik conspirator and faithful follower of Lenin, the founder of the Soviet Union. In his prime, Stalin was hailed as a universal genius, as a ‘shining sun’, or ‘the staff of life’, and also as a ‘great teacher and friend’ (especially of those communities he most savagely persecuted); once he was even publicly invoked as “Our Father” by a Metropolitan of the Russian Orthodox Church. Achieving wide visual promotion through busts, statues, and icons of himself, the dictator became the object of a fanatical cult that was overturned after his death. Benito Mussolini, 1883—1945 Benito Mussolini was not always a great dictator, but he always knew what it took to become one. He had the ability to use people and make himself appear like a God in a hectic society. His father was a blacksmith and his mother a schoolteacher. He did not grow up in a rich home and was rejected most of his young adult life. When he came to power, Mussolini threatened to make Italy ungovernable through violence unless he was promoted Prime Minister. Mussolini made Italy a fascist state that stood totally behind him. He knew how to use the media to promote fascism and himself. Like Hitler,
Базовый курс 235 he used propaganda to gradually build himself up as a legend who was always right and could solve all of Italy’s problems. He took control of everything from what was written in newspapers to what children learned in school. Mussolini made Italy dependent on him. And anyone who didn’t feel this way about him was killed. He became known as “Il Duce” (the leader). On April 28, 1945, Mussolini and his mistress Clara Petacci, were arrested by Italian partisans. Realizing he was going to be killed, Mussolini opened up his shirt and asked to be shot in the chest. But for some reason the attempts to shoot him failed — the gun would not fire. Eventually he was shot and his body was strung upside down the next day for all to see. Adolf Hitler (Adolf Shiklgruber), 1889—1945 A ruthless dictator, Adolf Hitler led Germany to a catastrophe in World War II. Bom in Austria, Hitler earned a meager living as an artist in Vienna during his youth. At the outbreak of World War I, he joined the German army. Germany’s surrender in 1918 shocked him into political action. In 1921 he took over a small extremist party of Nazis. His first attempt to seize power in 1923 failed and he was arrested and jailed. While there he wrote Mein Kampf (My Struggle) which set out his ruinous political philosophy. Hitler held extreme nationalist and racist views: he advocated German supremacy and showed a passionate hatred for Jewish people. In 1932 the Nazis became the largest party in parliament, and the following year Hitler was appointed chancellor of Germany. He soon eliminated all opposition and established himself as the Fuhrer (leader) of a police state. In 1939 he invaded Poland, launching the world into World War II. Hitler then ordered the “final solution” — the attempted extermination of the Jews. Six million Jews were killed in specially built death camps such as Osvenzim. The gas-chambers and crematoria were waiting for women, children, old and sick people. Young and healthy people were left for hard labour at underground plants, they were doomed to slavery and hungry death. Not many people survived to the moment when the Red Army and ally troops came to set free the prisoners of Osvenzim and other death camps. Hitler’s triumph as the master of most of Europe was short- lived. By 1945 the USSR with the allies defeated his armies. On April 30, 1945, he committed suicide in his bunker in Berlin. The last German forces surrendered a few days later on May 8.
236 The Best of Just English Andrei Chikatilo, 1936—1994 (The Rostov Ripper) Andrei Chikatilo, one of the world’s worst serial killers, murdered up to 53 young girls and boys in Russia starting in 1982 and ending in 1990, when he was captured. Starting from June 1982 the bodies of his victims were found in the Ukraine. They contained a numerous amount of stab wounds, and their eyes were ripped off. The fact that the infomartion about the series ofcrimes was not published for fear of panic and embarrassment made it difficult to catch the killer. But the detectives managed to link the cases and realized that the killer lured his victims at the train station in town. The stations were then monitored by plain-clothes detectives, looking for any suspicious behaviour. Chikatilo was discovered in the train station trying to pick up children. The police apprehended him and searched his bag. They found a rope, dirty towels and a kitchen knife. But the blood tests seemed to indicate that he was not involved in the series of crimes. Chikatilo was then released. A profile of the killer was compiled by a leading Russian psychologist. He called the killer ‘Citizen X’ and concluded that X possibly had a wife and children (which was later confirmed). He called the killer a sadist, and mutilating his victims was some form of dominance. Years later Chikatilo was detained again. He admitted to at least 53 murders and also led police to some undiscovered victims. Chikatilo’s reasons for gouging at his victims eyes was that he believed that the victims eyes kept an image of the killer in them after. Chikatilo spent his 6-months trial in a steel cage. He was found legally sane and sentenced to death. He was executed by a gunshot to the head in 1994. The Unabomber (Theodore Kaczynski), b. 1942 Despite what his name might imply, the Unabomber is not a villain from the Batman TV show in the sixties. The Unabomber is a serial bomber; he bombed 16 targets over a period of 17 years, killing three and injuring 23 people. Among his victims are the vice-president of a major advertising company, an owner of a computer corporation and several prominent scientists. His bombs were characterized by the letters “FC” being scratched into them, which stand for “Freedom Club.” His early targets were primarily universities and airplane related facilities though his later taste in targets
Базовый курс 237 broadened to include anything concerned with technology. UNABOM was his FBI code name—the “UN” stands for universities, the “A” for airplanes, and the “BOM” for bomber. The media distorted the name to the Unabomber. The FBI offered a reward of one million dollars for his capture. In his attempt to justify his career in serial killing, the Unabomber advertised himself as a philosopher. Developing the motto of the famous anarchist Mikhail Bakunin, “The urge to destroy is a creative urge.” Theodore Kaczynski declared, “Clearly we are in a position to do a great deal of damage.” He believed that society should be broken down into small familial and tribal units, and that any technology is undesirable and ruinous for people’s minds. The Unabomber also called for the return to “wild nature”. To that end, he manufactured all of his bombs by hand, very unconventionally, from wood. In 1995, the Unabomber sent an open letter to major American newspapers, promising to stop bombing if they published his Manifesto. After some deliberation with FBI authorities the newspapers did what he wanted. The notorious terrorist was brought to justice by his brother David who had read Theo’s manifesto in a newspaper. What struck him most was how identical the style and ideas in the murderer’s treatise were with those of his brother. David gave the FBI a tip-off claiming that ^Manifesto contained his elder brother’s obsessive ideas. He went out of his way to convince the FBI that it was his brother Theo who had become the most wanted man in America. FBI’s G-men surrounded Theo’s hut in the mountains of Montana and arrested him in 1996. His trial lasted for two years. He was found insane and sentenced to life-long imprisonment. In the same year he was listed as one of the twenty five world-famous persons by People magazine. He is now serving his term in a solitary cell in Sacramento prison. His brother David was awarded 1 million dollars. After writing a book about the Unabomber he earned a few millions more which he is going to donate to the people who suffered from his infamous brother. Osama Bin Laden (b. 1957) Osama Bin Muhammed bin Awad bin Laden was bom in Saudi Arabia in 1957 — the 17th of 52 children, bom into Saudi Arabia’s wealthiest construction family. In 1979 Bin Laden graduated with a degree in Civil Engineering and in the same year his violent terrorist roots were formed when he joined the mujahadeen movement in Afghanistan.
238 The Best of Just English During 1986—1989, Bin Laden established the now notorious ‘Al Quaeda’ network — an organization of ex-mujahadeen, with a murderous mission to provide fighters and funds for the Afghan armed struggle. As a result of the increasingly violent policies, allegedly dictated by Bin Laden, there followed a series of terrorist actions across the globe. The first was an explosion in a hotel in Aden and then the New York World Trade Centre bombing in 1992. Bin Laden is now on a mission to promote his terrorist ideas in the name of Islam, driven by his belief that violence is the only policy. His fanatical terrorist views include the concept of suicide attacks. Bin Laden’s Jihad (holy war) reached a peak in 2001, resulting in the world’s most devastating terrorist outrage — destruction of the New York World Trade Centre and an attack on the Pentagon in Washington on Sept 11th, where 3,500 souls perished. Bin Laden has enormous personal wealth and he could spend his life in tranquil luxury, but he has chosen to support violent terrorist groups. It could be argued he has symptoms of a control freak. It is interesting to observe that although he is only in his forties, he looks much older and walks with a curved back and with a walking stick. This may be a classic example of somebody who is physically inferior but seeks power and violence as a substitute.
PART IV FAMOUS DETECTIVES Father Brown One of the great figures of detective fiction is Father Brown, created by G.K. Chesterton (1874—1936) and largely based on his friend Father John O’Connor. Father Brown is a plump, moon-faced Roman Catholic priest from Essex, apparently vague and harmless, never separated from his large black umbrella and several brown paper parcels tied up with a string. In fact Father Brown is a master of detection as Chesterton showed in forty-nine stories published between 1911 and 1935. He finds himself involved, more or less by chance, in a crime, which he solves by using common sense and his vast knowledge of human nature. Father Brown appeared on film in 1954, with Alec Guinness in the title role, and later in a television series, starring Kenneth More. Sherlock Holmes The famous fictional detective of Victorian times was created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859—1930) who based the brilliant deductive method and personality of his character on Dr. Joseph Bell, under whom he had worked as a surgeon. Holmes with his incredible powers of deduction, his mastery of disguise and his scientific brilliance, first appeared in The Strand Magazine in 1882 in a story called A Study in Scarlet together with his faithful chronicler Dr. John Watson. Longer novels, collections of short stories continued to appear up until The Case of Sherlock Holmes (1927). But Conan Doyle had already been tired of his creation and had once tried to kill him off with his rival Professor Moriarty, but public pressure had secured his return. The stories remain hugely popular and have provided material for countless films and TV series. But the phrase “Elementary my dear Watson” was never uttered by Holmes and is a later invention. Ellery Queen This was at the same time the name of a fictional detective and also the pen-name of the two authors, Frederick Dannay and Manfred Lee. The 9 — 9099
240 The Best of Just English books written by Ellery Queen are about an American playboy writer of detective stories, who keeps getting involved in mysteries himself. He first appeared in The Roman Hat Mystery in 1929, and in many later books. He was also the hero of several films made between 1935 and 1943, and Peter Lawford starred in a television series based on the books in 1971. Ellery Queen (the author) also founded ^Mystery Magazine, which was a popular outlet for detective stories by other writers. Hercules Poirot The famous fictional detective, the Belgian Hercules Poirot, made his first appearance in 1920 in The Mysterious Affair at Styles written by the best selling novelist Agatha Christie (1891—1976), and he appeared in many of her stories after that. The heyday of Poirot’s popularity was the period between the two World Wars, but he was revived in films, especially Murder on the Orient Express andDeath on the Nile. Plump, vain and dapper, Poirot has moustaches of which he is very proud and a weakness for exhorting people to use their ‘little grey cells’(their brains). Inspector Jules Maigret Inspector Maigret was created by novelist Georges Simenon in 1931 and has become one of the most popular fictional policeman in the world. He is the central figure in more than 500 novels and short stories written by Simenon. He is a calm, thoughtful and very painstaking detective, who never makes any spectacular arrests and does most of his work by talking to people. Through the stories the reader can form a very vivid picture of the seamy side of French life. A television series, starring Rupert Davies as Maigret, was made by the BBC in the 1960s. Perry Mason The hard-hitting American defence lawyer Perry Mason was created by Erie Stanley Gardner (1889—1970). With his attractive and clever
Базовый курс 241 secretary Della Street and his legman detective Paul Drake, Mason specialises in taking on clients accused of crimes and proving their innocence. His cases generally end in a dramatic courtroom scene in which Mason unmasks the true culprit. He first appeared in The Case of the Velvet Claws in 1933. In a popular television series of the 1960s, actor Raymond Burr played Perry Mason. 9*
PART V THE STUPIDEST CRIMINALS 1. Bank Robbers 1.1. Klaus Schmidt, 41, burst into a bank in Berlin, Germany, waved a pistol, and screamed, “Hand over the money!” The staff asked if he wanted a bag, to which he replied, “Damn right it’s a real gun!” Guessing Schmidt was deaf, the manager set off the alarm, saying later, “It was ridiculously loud, but he didn’t seem to notice.” After five minutes, punctuated by Schmidt’s occasionally shouting, “I am a trained killer!”, police arrived and arrested him. Schmidt then sued the bank, accusing them of exploiting his disability. 1.2. Five armed raiders burst into a bank in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan. Their demands for money were foiled when the staff calmly opened up the safes to reveal rows of empty shelves. Unfortunately, robbers were let down by their ignorance of the republic’s finances. No money had been delivered to any of the banks in Baku for the previous two months. 1.3. John Nashid from New York held up a bank in Bronx and got away with $ 17,000. He then led the police on a five-mile car chase through back streets, throwing fistfuls of dollars out of the window in an attempt to hold up pursuit. To a certain extent it may have worked, as $6,300 of his haul wasn’t recovered; but it also left a trail for the 12 cop cars chasing him to follow. Eventually Nashid ran from his car, dived through the window of a nearby nursing home, and was finally captured near a garbage bin at the rear of the building. He had entered the bank draped in a sheet with holes cut out for his eyes, and was immediately nicknamed ‘Casper the Ghost’ by police. 1.4. Scottish bank robber Derek Macfadden was caught because he was too law-abiding. Gun in hand, he held up a bank at Giffnock, near
Базовый курс 243 Glasgow, and then raced off in his getaway car with £4,000. Despite being pursued by police, he halted at a red traffic light, where he was promptly arrested. 1.5. A man arrived at a bank in East Hartford, Connecticut. He was wearing a blue bandanna across his face and brandishing a pistol as he yanked at the door, only to find it was locked. The bank had actually closed at 3:00. After staring at the door for a few seconds, the man ran off into a small black car. Staff still inside the bank called the police, but no arrest was made. Perhaps even later in arriving was the gang who spent the night cutting their way into a Lloyds Bank in Hampshire, England. They cut bars with a hydraulic saw, wrenched out a security grille, and punched a hole through a wall. The only problem was that the bank was closed down four years earlier, and the building was empty. 1.6. From Florence, Italy, is a tale in which the guards got it wrong: security men were all too eager to help a man with his foot in a cast as he hobbled into a bank on metal crutches. Ignoring the alarm from the metal detector at the bank’s entrance, they guided the apparently disabled man to a cashier’s register. There he dropped his crutches, pulled a gun, and grabbed $40,000 before sprinting away. 1.7. Michael Norton stole two security cameras from the lobby of a bank. The cops were sure it was Norton, one of the neigbourghood characters, because the last pictures the cameras took showed him unscrewing them from the wall mountings. Detective Thomas Hickey set off to cruise the streets and eventually found Norton. “Hey”, called Hickey. “Could you explain to me how come the bank has your picture?” “I didn’t rob the bank,” Norton protested. “I just took the camera.” Oops... 2. Muggers 2.1. After he had been robbed of $20 in Winnipeg, Canada, Roger Morse asked for his wallet back. The mugger agreed, handed over his own wallet by mistake, and fled — leaving Roger $250 better off. 2.2. In Camden, New Jersey, Clarence Gland and Kin Williams were taking a late-night stroll when a car pulled up and two men got out. One of them produced a long black snake and shoved it
244 The Best of Just English toward Gland’s face, and while the couple stood rigid, his associate made off with cash, a personal stereo, and a wristwatch. A snake expert later identified the reptile from its description as a completely harmless rat snake. In other words, it was not loaded. 2.3. A gun-toting mugger made a bad mistake when he held up a man who was walking home through an alley in West Virginia. Finding his victim was carrying only $13, he demanded a check for $300. The man wrote out the check, and the thief was caught the next day when he tried to cash it. As the cops said afterward: “The crook wasn’t very bright.” 2.4. An Italian who turned to snatching handbags to finance his drug addiction came unstuck, when he robbed his own mother by mistake. The woman was walking along the street when her son, who didn’t see her face until it was too late, sped past on a motorcycle and snatched her bag. Recognizing him, his mother was so angry she reported him to the police. 2.5. Belgian police quickly solved two Brussels street robberies when they heard the victims’ description of the culprit: he was wearing a bright- yellow jacket and had a cast on one leg. The man was caught within 15 minutes of his second robbery. 2.6. Purse snatcher Daniel Pauchin ended up in hospital, when he tried to rob two women in a street in Nice, France. The victims were burly transvestites who beat him up and left him with broken ribs. 2.7. Mandy Hammond from Arnold, England, went out with two friends. As they waited for a taxi, a man walked up to them and demanded Mandy’s lipstick and eyeshadow. The group thought he was joking, but he then pulled a gun, held it to her friend Paul Upton’s head and announced, “Don’t laugh. I’ve got a gun, and I’ll shoot if you haven’t got any lipstick.” Lipstick was promptly produced, and the man strolled off. In the same month a gunman struck in Scarborough, England. Wearing a hood and dark glasses, he forced a pharmacist assistant, at gunpoint, to fill a bag with pimple cream. Police were said to be “puzzled”. 3. Thiefs 3.1. Edward Williams of Houston, Texas, was fined $10,000 and put on 10 years’ probation. He had formerly been a storeroom supervisor at Houston’s Jefferson Davis Hospital, and he had been convicted of stealing 79,680 rolls of toilet paper. No one knew for sure what he’d done with the purloined paper. 3.2. Thieves slipped into a dental office in Hatch End, England in February 2003. Having climbed on the roof and forced a window, they
Базовый курс 245 made a thorough search of the premises, ignored expensive drugs and valuable equipment, and made off with several toothbrushes. 3.3. The day after winning $640,000 in Italy’s national lottery, Flavio Maestrini was arrested for stealing $400 from a shop. Appearing in court, he explained that he didn’t enjoy spending money unless it was stolen. 3.4. A Russian man arrived at his country retreat near Arkhangelsk, Russia, on the White Sea and found the entire house stolen, complete with outhouses and fences, leaving just a vegetable patch. 3.5. Members of a British Rail cricket team turned up for the first match of the season at their field near Kidderminster, England. The pavilion had disappeared. How one steals an eight-room building without anyone noticing remains a mystery. 3.6. Alan Omonde appeared in court in Uganda on the charge of stealing an old man’s big edible rat. Omonde was given 12 strokes of the cane for stealing John Onyait’s smoked rat, while Onyait lamented that he’d been deprived of his favourite dish. Omonde was also ordered to hunt down and trap five more edible rats as a fine payable to his elderly victim. 4. Escape Artists 4.1. Two prisoners tried to escape from an appearance at a court in Watford, England. Forgetting that they were handcuffed together, they ran on either side of a lamppost. Having hurtled into one another, the stunned pair was grabbed by the guard and bundled into a waiting prison van. 4.2. Relatives bribed a prison guard to smuggle a bunch of bananas to an inmate at Pecs, Hungary. Unfortunately the guard ran into the prison commander, and apparently unaware that there might be anything wrong with them, offered him his choice of the fruit. Needless to say, the commander chose the wrong banana, bit into the metal file contained within, and had the guard up on charges. 4.3. A certain Mr. Jorgen appeared on a Danish TV quiz show and easily outclassed his opponents. He was just about to take off with nearly $700 and a vacation for two in Marbella, Spain, when the producer took him aside: it seemed security wanted a word. Jorgen had been on the run for the previous 18 months, and his TV-addict prison officer had recognized him. 4.4. Double murderer David Graham was only too obliging when prison officers in Florida asked him to try to escape so they could test a new tracking dog. They even gave him a 30-minute start. Graham did his part perfectly, but the dog didn’t. Local police were called in to join the search, but Graham was long gone. A much better sniffer dog was employed
246 The Best of Just English at a jail in Mexico City, Mexico. It found Darren Brown hiding in a laundry van — which probably saved Brown a great deal of disappointment, as the laundry van’s immediate destination was another prison. 4.5. Three imprisoned robbers broke out of a new jail in Aixen- Provence, France by climbing ladders left behind by workmen. The workers had been erecting wires intended to deter helicopter-aided escapes from the prison yard, but in preventing the high-tech breakouts, they seem to have forgotten all about the low-tech ones. 4.6. An unnamed man reportedly climbed the wall of Chelmsford jail, in Essex, England, from the outside. He was carrying a rope with which he intended to haul his brother out. The fellow lost his balance, fell into the jail, and was arrested as he staggered around the prison yard, dazed but unhurt. 5. Shop-Lifters 5.1. Steven Kemble was arrested in St. George, Utah, when he tried to flee after shop-lifting a CD. After being briefly detained by a store clerk, he broke free, dashed out the door, and ran into a pillar in front of the shop, knocking himself unconscious. 5.2. Roy Philips Downfall was the color fellow. Appearing in court on shop-lifting charges, he wore a yellow parka, yellow shirt, yellow pants, and a yellow tie. It was a similar dress that drew him to the attention of the store detective at a supermarket in Oldham, England, where everything he was after had a yellow connection: jellies, mustard, cheese, three pairs of socks, and two pairs of underpants. He was given a one-month suspended sentence. 5.3. In Johannesburg, South Africa, a shop-lifter with a passion for cheese was caught for the sixth time after stealing Gouda and Cheddar. Cleopas Ntima told police he had paid for his other groceries, but said ‘voices’ told him to take the cheese. 6. Robbers 6.1. Mr. Wazir Jiwi was the only clerk in a late night shop in Houston, Texas, when he found himself looking at two pistols. “You don’t need two,” he told the bandit. “Why don’t you sell me one of them?” The gunman named his price at $ 100; Jiwi handed over the cash and was given the gun. As he placed it under the counter, he pushed the button that locked the shop door. They then agreed on the price for the other gun. The outlaw grabbed the second bundle of cash, put his other pistol on the counter, and
Базовый курс 247 tried to leave. When he found he could not get out, Jiwi told him to bring the money back and he would let him go. And he did let him go, presumably guessing that anyone that stupid would get arrested soon enough anyway. 6.2. An armed man in Groiningen, northern Holland, handed a shopkeeper a note demanding money. The man behind the counter took one look and then wrote his own terse reply: “Bugger off’ (or the nearest Dutch equivalent). And the gunman did, too, fleeing empty-handed. 6.3. When John Gregory came to trial, the tale that came out was one of high farce rather than high drama. Gregory and an accomplice had attempted to rob a video-shop in Feltham, England, but unfortunately they were so dense, they thought the shop’s type-writer was the cash register and ordered the manager, at gunpoint, to “open it up”. Even after they’d spotted their mistake, they still managed to grab only five pounds before their shotgun went off accidentally, which scared them so much they fled, dropping the cash in the shop’s doorway. The net return for the robbery was no money and 4 years’ youth custody. 6.4. A robber armed with a sausage raided a shop in Graz, Austria, and escaped with 1,600 shillings. Storekeeper Rudy Buckmeister was hit over the head with the ten-pound sausage. “It felt like a baseball bat,” he said. 6.5. Clive Bunyan burst into a store near Scarborough, England, brandishing a toy revolver and wearing a crash helmet and a mask. He got the shop clerk to hand over 250 pounds and fled outside to his motorcycle. However, he’d forgotten that written on his helmet in inch-high letters was “CLIVE BUNYAN — DRIVER”. He was sentenced to 200 hours of community service. 7. Burglars 7.1. Having broken into a Hong Kong garment factory and found nothing worth stealing, burglar Yu Kin-Fong left a note saying: “Put some money here next time or I’ll set fire to your factory. You make me do this for nothing. I can’t even find 10 cents.” He was tracked down and sentenced to three years. 7.2. Gloria Smile opened the door to find the reformed burglar in his twenties standing on her doorstep. Returning to the scene of his crimes in
248 The Best of Just English Westcliff, England, the young man said he had found God, apologized to her and handed her a shopping bag containing a silver coffeepot, creamer, and sugar bowl. Unfortunately he’d gone to the wrong house; Ms. Smile hadn’t been his victim. 7.3. Two burglars raiding the Browns family home in Coventry, England got a little help from four-year-old Russell Brown. He got up to investigate when he heard a noise at 3 a.m., but the strangers he found in the darkened living room whispered that they were friends of his mommy and daddy who had come to borrow the stereo, VCR, and TV, but didn’t want to disturb them because it was so late. Russell was delighted to help, and held the back door open for his visitors as they left with their haul, before going back upstairs to bed. The men were later arrested and the property recovered. 7.4. Two 78-year-old burglars were caught red-handed in a house in San Paolo, Brazil, when the occupants of the house returned unexpectedly. The one inside was too deaf to hear the warning of his accomplice outside, and the lookout man was not fit enough to escape. 7.5. Three burglars who broke into a cottage found nothing inside, literally. It was a front, held up by scaffolding and used by BBC for filming a drama at Ewenny, Wales. 8. ‘Miscelleaneous’ Crooks 8.1. In the Tasmanian town of Launceton, Don Desmond Davey was fined $1,600 for quacking like a duck on his radio transmitter. He was convicted of broadcasting something that was not speech, and ordered to hand over his radio as well. Shortly before Barry Brownless of London was fined 1,400 pounds for barking at a police dog. He was found guilty of using threatening behavior. 8.2. A man was arrested in Bangkok, Thailand charged with impersonating a police officer. Using a stolen uniform, he had spent two months posing as a traffic cop in order to extort money from motorists. He finally came unstuck when a senior officer passed by on an inspection tour and he saluted with the wrong hand. 8.3. Pickpocket Mario Palumbo thought he was going to have another good day at the races as he mingled with a 75,000-strong crowd in Monza, Italy. Unfortunately, his chosen victim turned out to be Pietro Fontana, who was not only a cop but the head of Milan’s anti-pickpocket squad. Apparently known as the King of the Pickpockets, Palumbo was said to have remarked on his arrest: “When they hear of this in Naples, I will die of shame.”
Базовый курс 249 8.4. John Gilmer of Goole, England, was arrested for drunken driving but the police left him alone for a moment. Seizing his opportunity, he stole the police car and drove off. He would probably have got away with it, driving along dark Yorkshire lanes, but for one thing: he had no idea how to turn off the patrol car’s flashing blue light. The police simply followed the light and arrested him when he gave up and parked by a riverbank. 8.5. Unemployed DavidMorris, 21 from Beckenham in Kent, England, was passing the time before a date with his girlfriend when he wrote a note reading “I have a gun in my pocket and I’ll shoot it off unless you hand over the money”. He then went into three shops and passed the note over the counter. At the drugstore an assistant refused to accept the note because she thought it was an obscene suggestion. Next door in a hardware store a sales clerk shook his head and said he could not read English. Morris then went into a take-out restaurant, but the cashier couldn’t read the note without his glasses. Morris asked for it back and hung around the street outside. Arrested soon afterward he told the police: “I’ve been a twit... I only pretended to have a gun.” He was put on probation for two years. 9. Outrageous Lawsuits 9.1. A woman in Israel is suing a TV station and its weatherman for $1,000 after he predicted a sunny day and it rained. The woman claims the forecast caused her to leave home lightly dressed. As a result, she caught the flu, missed 4 days of work, spent $38 on medication and suffered stress. 9.2. A woman dropped some burglar bars on her foot. She claimed that her neighbour, who was helping her carry the bars, had caused the accident. The neighbour’s insurance company offered to settle the dispute by paying her medical bills, but she refused. She wanted more and sued for damages, including “pain and suffering.” The jury took only 17 minutes to unanimously decide that the woman was fully responsible for her own injuries. The innocent neighbour had to pay $4,700 in defense costs. The two are no longer friends. 9.3. A jury awarded $178,000 in damages to a woman who sued her former fiancee for breaking their seven-week engagement. The breakdown: $93,000 for pain and suffering, $60,000 for loss of income from her legal practice, and $25,000 for psychiatric counseling expenses. 9.4. Inmates at a county jail sued for cruel and unusual living conditions: bunk beds, cells lacking a sink and toilet, and no way to exercise in winter. These criminals were awarded $2 million dollars, paid by the taxpayers of Massachusetts. Each inmate who was a party to the suit got
250 The Best of Just English $10 tax-free, for each day he was jailed. Their award included damages plus 12 per cent interest from the time the case was settled until the time they collected their windfall. 9.5. John Carter, a New Jersey man sued McDonald’s for injuries he sustained in an auto accident with one of their customers. He claimed that the customer who hit him did so after spilling the contents of his chocolate shake (which he purchased from McDonald’s) onto his lap while reaching over for his fries. He alleged that McDonald’s sold their customer food knowing he would consume it while driving and without announcing or affixing a warning to the effect “don’t eat and drive.” The court concluded that McDonald’s had no duty to warn customers of obvious things which they should expect to know, but refused McDonald’s request for attorney’s fees stating that the plaintiffs attorney was “creative, imaginative and he shouldn’t be penalized for that.” This case was in the court system for three years, underwent appellate court review and cost McDonald’s over $10,000. 9.6. An American woman was treated by a psychiatrist, became romantically involved with him, and subsequently married him. After more than five years of marriage they divorced, at which time the woman sued her ex-husband for psychiatric malpractice and negligence claiming that the romantic or sexual relationship between them started before the formal psychiatric treatment ended. She contended that her ex-husband had breached the standard of care as a psychiatrist by becoming romantically involved with her, and sought general, special and punitive damages. 9.7. A surfer recently sued another surfer for “taking his wave.” The case was ultimately dismissed because they were unable to put a price on “pain and suffering” endured by watching someone ride the wave that was “intended for you.” 9.8. A man sued a lemonade company for $ 10,000 for false advertising. He claimed that he suffered physical and mental injury and emotional distress from the implicit promises in the advertisements. When he drank the beverage, success with women did not come true for him plus, he got sick. The Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed a lower-court decision dismissing the case.
Just English xt& оа Д**# ШИХ ЮРИСТОВ ДЛЯ БУДУ
“Let reverence for the law ...be taught in schools. Let it be written in primers, spelling books, almanacs. Let it be preached from the pulpit, proclaimed from the legislative halls and enforced in courts of justice. In short, let it become the political religion ofthe nation and let the old and young, the rich and the poor, of all sexes and tongues and colors and conditions sacrifice unceasingly upon its altars. ” Abraham Lincoln
INTRODUCTION FOR TEACHERS AND STUDENTS
ПОСЛЕДОВАТЕЛЬНОСТЬ РАБОТЫ С ТЕКСТОМ Для отработки навыков последовательного перевода работу с текстом целесообразно осуществлять следующим образом: 1) прочесть текст целиком, не пользуясь словарем (просмотро- вое чтение); 2) работать с каждым предложением, выписывая слова из сло- варя и подбирая необходимые значения (анализирующее чтение); 3) прочесть текст еще раз, последовательно переводя его на рус- ский язык, останавливаясь на местах, трудных для чтения и перевода (синтезирующее чтение); 4) для отработки соответствующих навыков целесообразно под- готовить письменный перевод текста. Типы чтения Просмотровое чтение служит для определения общего содер- жания текста. Это очень важный этап, которым не стоит пренебре- гать. Он дает общее представление о характере текста, его направ- ленности и стиле и облегчает поиски правильного перевода. Например, в тексте, где речь идет о мебели, chair — стул, пред- мет обстановки; в тексте про администрацию университетских фа- культетов Chair — кафедра, а в тексте про парламентские дебаты Chair — председатель. Анализирующее чтение служит непосредственно для опреде- ления содержания текста. На этом этапе обращается внимание как на чтение незнакомых слов, так и на их перевод. При этом следует пользо- ваться словарем. Синтезирующее чтение помогает воспринять текст как общее целое с учетом информации, почерпнутой в словаре. На этом этапе создается целостный устный перевод текста. Принципы работы со словарем Для того чтобы работа с текстом была наиболее продуктивной, словарь должен включать не менее 45 тыс. словарных статей.
101 Texts on Law 255 Лексикографические принципы описаны в начале каждого словаря. Авторы рекомендуют ознакомиться с ними, а также с системой спе- циальных помет, используемой в данном словаре. Тогда будет зна- чительно проще ориентироваться во всем многообразии словарных значений и находить те, которые нужны для данного контекста. На- ряду с традиционными печатными изданиями рекомендуется также пользоваться электронными словарями, такими как Mulitilex 2.0 или Lingvo 7, так как помимо общеупотребительной лексики они содер- жат специальные юридические термины и понятия. Однако не сле- дует увлекаться портативными электронными словарями-перевод- чиками, так как их словарный запас весьма ограничен и переводы не всегда адекватны. Например, значения могут даваться в алфавитном порядке, тогда как обычный словарь выделяет первое, второе и т.д. значения слова. Работа с незнакомыми словами При поиске незнакомых слов в словаре следует: 1. Определить часть речи и морфологический состав слова (зна- чения некоторых слов следует искать без приставок); выписать в свой “словарик” начальную форму слова. 2. Найти слово в словаре, выписать транскрипцию данного сло- ва (включая ударение). 3. Выбрать из словарной статьи подходящее по контексту зна- чение и выписать его. Если нет перевода, который бы в точности соответствовал смыслу данного предложения, выписать ближайший по значению, а также записать свой вариант контекстуального пере- вода. При устной презентации перевода рекомендуется пользоваться записями, сделанными в ходе работы с текстом, как при чтении, так и при переводе. Наиболее полному пониманию текста при работе индивидуаль- но или в учебных группах способствует выполнение следующих ви- дов работы: постановка вопросов к тексту и ответы на вопросы по содержанию текста. Постановка вопросов к тексту • Общий вопрос — General question / ‘Yes— No’ question • Альтернативный вопрос — Alternative question / ‘Or’ question • Разделительный вопрос — Disjunctive question / ‘Tag’ question • Специальный вопрос — Special question / ‘Wh- ’ question
256 The Best of Just English • Вопрос к подлежащему* — Question referring to the subject of the sentence / Who — What’ question Вопросы рекомендуется задавать к разным предложениям. Воп- росы должны иметь смысловую и стилистическую законченность. Предлагаем использовать нижеследующие образцы работы с текстами для дальнейшей самостоятельной работы или для занятий в учебных группах. text 1 THE ENGLISH POLITICAL HERITAGE** During the 1600s people from many regions, such as Spain, the Netherlands. France, Sweden, Norway, and West Africa, settled in North America. Most colonists, however, came from England. It was the English who established and governed the original thirteen colonies along the Atlantic coast. The English colonists brought with them ideas about government that had been developing in England for centuries. By the 1600s the English government offered its citizens political liberties, such as trial by jury, that were largely unknown elsewhere. At the heart of the English system were two principles of government. These principles — limited government and representative government — greatly influenced the development of the United States. By the time the first colonists reached North America, the idea that government was not all-powerful had become an accepted part of the English system. The idea first appeared in the Magna Carta***, or Great Charter, that King John signed in 1215. The Magna Carta established the principle of limited government, in which the power of the monarch, or government, was limited, not absolute. This document provided for protection against unjust punishment and the loss of life, liberty, and property except according to law. Under the Magna Carta, the king agreed that certain taxes could not be levied without popular consent. The rights in the Magna Carta originally applied only to the nobility. During the next few centuries, however, other groups won political liberties, primarily through agreements between English monarchs and the nobility and merchants. * этот подтип специального вопроса отличается прямым порядком слов и отсутствием вспомогательного глагола ** В образце текста подчеркнуты те слова и выражения, которые могут выз- вать затруднения при чтении и переводе *** Magna Carta — Великая Хартия Вольностей
101 Texts on Law 257 I. Просмотровое чтение Следует прочитать текст и определить его основную тематику. В данном случае не только само название текста, но и словосочета- ния, такие как: ideas about government, 1600s, political liberties, principles of government, подсказывают, что речь идет о неких прин- ципах управления государством в исторической перспективе. II. Работа со словарем Предположим, что следующие слова и выражения вызвали зат- руднения: 1. heritage — ['hentid3] — наследство, зд. наследие. Предлага- емое словарем первое значение не соответствует стилистике текста, так как оно не сочетается с определением ‘политическое’. 2. the Netherlands — ['nedaeolondz] — Нидерланды, Голлан- дия. Географические названия даны в конце словаря отдельным спис- ком. 3. to settle — ['setl] — поселяться, обосновываться, заселять. Слово обладает большим количеством значений, поэтому необходи- мо руководствоваться контекстом: — settled in North America. 4. government — ['gAv(a)nmont] — правительство, власть, форма правления, управление. Слово обладает большим количе- ством значений, поэтому необходимо руководствоваться контекстом (см. Комментарий к тексту). 5. trial by jury — ['traiol]; ['бзиэп] — судебное разбиратель- ство с участием присяжных. Словари достаточного объема пред- лагают перевод всего словосочетания, помещая его под рубрикой юр. 6. largely — ['la:63li] — в значительной степени, в основном, зд. практически. 7. elsewhere — ['els'we о] — (где-нибудь) в другом месте, зд. где бы то ни было, нигде. 8. all-powerful — ['o:l'pauoful] — всемогущий, обладающий всей полнотой власти. Слово состоит из двух компонентов, в слова- ре оно может отсутствовать, но, зная перевод обоих компонентов, легко вывести значение целого. 9. monarch — ['тэпэк] — монарх. Следует обратить особое внимание на произношение.
258 The Best of Just English 10. to provide for — [prs'vaid] — предусматривать, обеспечи- вать. Слово provide обладает большим количеством значений, по- этому необходимо обратить внимание на предлог ‘for’ и контекст. 11. unjust—['And3Ast]—несправедливый.В словах подобного рода значение часто можно вывести, зная общее значение приставки и корня: ‘un-’ отрицательная приставка + ‘just’ — справедливый. 12. to levy (taxes) — ['levi] — взимать, собирать налоги. В данном случае важно понимать синтаксическую структуру предло- жения: ‘taxes’ — подлежащее, ‘could not be levied’ — составное гла- гольное сказуемое. 13. consent — [kan'sent] — согласие. Следует обратить особое внимание на ударение. 14. originally— [э'пбзшэЬ]— первоначально. Необходимо избежать напрашивающегося перевода этого слова как ‘оригиналь- но’. В данном контексте, где прослеживается историческая взаимо- связь явлений, на первый план выходит временной оттенок этого слова. 15. the nobility — (no(u)'biliti] — дворянство, знать. Следует обратить внимание на наличие определенного артикля ‘the’, кото- рый указывает на то, что данное существительное собирательное. 16. primarily — ['prarmarili] — в первую очередь. В большин- стве словарей можно найти лишь слово ‘primary’, означающее “пер- воначальный, первичный”. Зная, что ‘-1у’ — продуктивный суф- фикс наречия, легко вывести значение данного слова. 17. merchant — ['ma:tj (o)nt] — купец. Следует обратить особое внимание на произношение. III. Перевод текста Далее следует образец перевода текста на русский язык с уче- том вышеизложенных замечаний. Жирным шрифтом выделены грам- матические, синтаксические и стилистические трудности. THE ENGLISH POLITICAL HERITAGE During the 1600s people from many regions, such as Spain, the Netherlands, France, Sweden, Norway, and West Africa, settled in North America. Most colonists, however, came from England. It was the English who established and governed the original thirteen colonies along the Atlantic coast. АНГЛИЙСКОЕ ПОЛИТИЧЕСКОЕ НАСЛЕДИЕ В течение 17 века выходцы из многих стран и областей, таких как Испания, Нидерланды, Франция, Швеция, Норвегия, Западная Аф- рика, обосновались в Северной Америке. Од- нако большинство поселенцев было из Анг- лии. Именно англичане основали первые три- надцать колоний на Атлантическом побере- жье и стали ими управлять.
101 Texts on Law 259 The English colonists brought with them ideas about government that had been developing in England for centuries. By the 1600s the English government offered its citizens political liberties, such as trial by jury, that were largely unknown elsewhere. At the heart of the English system were two principles of government. These principles — limited government and representative government — greatly influenced the development of the United States. By the time the first colonists reached North America, the idea that gov- ernment was not all-powerful had become an accepted part of the English system. The idea first appeared in the Magna Carta, or Great Charter, that King John signed in 1215. The Magna Carta established the principle of limited government, in which the power of the monarch, or government, was limited, not absolute. This document provided for protection against unjust punishment and the loss of life, liberty, and property except according to law. Under the Magna Carta, the king agreed that certain taxes could not be levied without popular consent. The rights in the Magna Carta originally applied only to the nobility. During the next few centuries, however, other groups won political liberties, primarily through agreements between English monarchs and the nobility and merchants. Английские поселенцы привезли с собой идеи о государственном управлении, которые вы- рабатывались в Англии на протяжении веков. К началу 17 века английская государственная система уже предоставляла своим гражданам такие политические свободы, как судебное раз- бирательство с участием присяжных, которых практически нигде больше не было. В основе английской системы лежали два принципа уп- равления. Эти принципы—ограничение вла- сти и представительная (выборная) власть — оказали большое влияние на развитие Со- единенных Штатов. К тому времени, как первые поселенцы дос- тигли берегов Северной Америки, мысль о том, что полномочия государственной власти ог- раничены, стала одним из общепринятых прин- ципов английской системы. Эта мысль впер- вые появилась в Великой Хартии Вольностей, подписанной королем Иоанном в 1215 году. Великая Хартия Вольностей установила прин- цип ограничения власти, в соответствии с ко- торым власть монарха или правительства яв- лялась не абсолютной, а ограниченной. Этот документ обеспечивал защиту человека от не- справедливого наказания, а также от лишения жизни, свободы и собственности, за исключе- нием тех случаев, когда это было предусмот- рено законом. Согласно Великой Хартии Вольностей монарх признавал, что нельзя взи- мать некоторые налоги без согласия народа. Права,закрепленные в Великой Хартии Воль- ностей, первоначально распространялись толь- ко на дворянство. Однако в последующие века и другие социальные группы добились по- литических свобод, в первую очередь благо- даря соглашениям между английскими монар- хами, дворянством и купечеством. IV. Комментарий к тексту • During the 1600s — В течение 17 века — Следует помнить о правилах чтения круглых дат (‘sixteen hundred-s’)-
260 The Best of Just English • regions — стран и областей — Поскольку в данном контексте английское слово нельзя перевести ни одним из слов “страна”, “реги- он” или “область”, имеет смысл дать два слова. • It was the English who... —Именно англичане — Нужно обра- тить внимание на наличие усилительной (эмфатической) конструк- ции It is + noun + who/that.... • ideas about government — идеи о государственном управлении English government offered... — английская государственная си- стема предоставляла... limited government... — ограничение власти representative government — представительная (выборная) власть Данный абзац требует особого внимания к переводу слова “government”. Из контекста следует, что речь идет не о “правитель- стве” Англии, а в первых двух случаях — о системе управления госу- дарством, и далее — о полномочиях властных структур. • The idea — Эта мысль... — Это один из тех случаев, когда из контекста ясно, какая именно идея имеется в виду. • the Magna Carta, or Great Charter — Великая Хартия Вольно- стей— В тексте имеется сноска, а после текста — правильный исто- рический перевод этого имени собственного. Если в тексте встреча- ется одно и то же название как в латинской, так и в английской фор- ме, достаточно дать один вариант русского перевода. • King John — король Иоанн — При переводе исторических имен на русский язык следует учитывать наличие традиционных вариан- тов. Так, например, William the Conqueror — Вильгельм Завоева- тель, Henry VIII — Генрих Восьмой, James I — Яков Первый, Charles I — Карл Первый, но Prince Charles — Принц Чарльз. • Under the Magna Carta — В соответствии с ... — Under + law/rule/order/contract/agreement, etc. — по, согласно, в соответ- ствии с • The rights in the Magna Carta — права, закрепленные в ... • other groups — другие социальные группы — в ряде случаев при переводе на литературный русский язык имеет смысл добавить поясняющее слово. • through (agreements) — благодаря, посредством, путем.
101 Texts on Law 261 V. Образец ответов на вопросы по содержанию текста 1. What political principles were brought by the colonists to America? The English colonists brought with them the two principles of government that were at the heart of the English system of government at the time: the principles of limited government and representative government. 2. What provisions did the Magna Carta contain? The Magna Carta limited the monarch’s power and provided for such civil rights as protection against unjust punishment and loss of life, liberty and property. 3. Who enjoyed the rights granted by the Magna Carta? Originally it was the nobility who enjoyed these rights, but in the following centuries these rights were extended to other social groups. VI. Грамматические вопросы к тексту 1. Общий вопрос (General Question / Yes—No Question) Did people from many regions settle in North America during the 1600s? 2. Специальный вопрос (Special Question / Wh— Question) When did King John sign the Magna Carta? 3. Альтернативный вопрос (Alternative Question) Did the rights in the Magna Carta originally apply to the nobility or to the merchants? 4. Разделительный вопрос (Disjunctive Question / Tag Question) Most colonists came from England, didn’t they?
262 The Best of Just English 5. Вопрос к подлежащему (Question referring to the subject of the sentence / Who— What Question) Who signed the Magna Carta? TEXT 2 THE PENTAGON PAPERS* In many nations prior restraint —censorship of information before it is published — is a common way for government to control information and limit freedom. In the United States, however, the Supreme Court has ruled that the press may be censored in advance only in cases relating directly to national security. The following Supreme Court decision illustrates this principle. In The Pentagon Papers Case the Supreme Court reaffirmed its position. In 1971 a Pentagon employee leaked to The New York Times a secret government report outlining the history of the United States involvement in the Vietnam War. This report, which became known as the Pentagon Papers, contained hundreds of government documents, many of them being secret cables, memos, and plans. Realizing that the Pentagon Papers showed that former government officials had lied to the American people about the war, The New York Times began to publish parts of the report. The government tried to stop further publication of the papers, arguing that national security would be endangered and that the documents had been stolen from the Defense Department. A divided Court rejected the government’s claims. The Court ruled that stopping publication would be prior restraint. Writing on behalf of the majority. Justice William Douglas noted that “the dominant purpose of the First Amendment to the Constitution declaring the freedom of the press was to prohibit the widespread practice of governmental suppression of embarrassing information.” He added: “The press was protected so that it could bare the secrets of government and inform the people... The press is to serve the governed and not the governors. “ * Pentagon Papers — ист. Документы Пентагона — секретное исследование предыстории участия США в войне во Вьетнаме
101 Texts on Law 263 I. Просмотровое чтение Следует прочитать текст и определить его основную тематику. В данном случае название текста следует переводить только после ознакомления с содержанием. Здесь словосочетания censorship of information, to control information, secret government report, government documents, to inform the people подсказывают, что речь идет о пробле- мах государственного контроля над средствами массовой информа- ции. II. Работа со словарем Предположим, что следующие слова и выражения вызвали зат- руднения: 1. prior restraint — ['ргагэ]; [ris'tremt] — предварительное ог- раничение (на публикацию документов). Общее значение выра- жения выводится из перевода его компонентов. 2. censorship, to censor— ['sensajip]; ['sensa] — цензура, под- вергать цензуре. Следует обратить внимание на произношение. 3. the Supreme Court — [sju'pri:m]; ['koit] — Верховный Суд. Это выражение приводится в словаре целиком. 4. to rule — [ru:l] — постановлять. Поскольку данный глагол сочетается в тексте со словом “court”, то выбирается юридическое значение слова (пометка юр. в словарной статье). 5. case — [keis] — судебное дело (юр.), случай. При выборе значения следует руководствоваться контекстом. 6. to reaffirm — ['ri:э 'f э:т] — вновь подтвердить, закрепить. Слово состоит из приставки “ге- ”, обозначающей повторность дей- ствия, и корня, значение которого следует искать в словаре. 7. employee — [,empl o'i:] — сотрудник, служащий. Следует обратить внимание на произношение. 8. to leak— [li:k] —зд. предоставить информацию, организо- вать утечку информации, от to leak — протекать, просочиться, обнаружиться, стать известным (о секрете, новости). 9. involvement — [m'volvmant] — зд. — участие. Это один из тех случаев, когда словарное значение слова может подсказать его неверный перевод в данном контексте. Здесь следует руководство- ваться значением конструкции “to be involved in”, обозначающего: “быть вовлеченным в, принимать участие в”.
264 The Best of Just English 10. cable — ['keibl] — телеграмма. Слово обладает большим количеством значений, поэтому необходимо руководствоваться кон- текстом. 11. memo — ['memou]—разг. сокр. от “memorandum”—док- ладная записка, справка. 12. to argue — ['a:gju:] — утверждать, доказывать. 13. to be endangered — [m'demdssd] — подвергаться опаснос- ти. 14. Defense Department — [di'fens]; [di'partm ant] — Министер- ство Обороны. Следует знать, что слово “department” соответству- ет русскому “министерство”, когда речь идет о правительственной системе США. 15. to reject a claim — [n'djekt]; [kleim]—отклонить иск (юр.) — перевод данного словосочетания дается в словарной статье к сло- ву “claim”. 16. justice — ['d3Astis] — судья. 17. suppression — [sa'prefn] — сокрытие, утаивание (инфор- мации). 18. embarrassing (information) — [ппЪ аегэ sir)] — зд. — комп- рометирующая информация. 19. to bare — [Ьеэ] — открывать, раскрывать. III. Перевод текста Далее следует образец перевода текста на русский язык с уче- том вышеизложенных замечаний. Жирным шрифтом выделены грам- матические, синтаксические и стилистические трудности. THE PENTAGON PAPERS ДОКУМЕНТЫ ПЕНТАГОНА In many nations prior restraint — censorship of information before it is published — is a common way for government to control information and limit freedom. In the United States, however, the Supreme Court has ruled that the press may be censored in advance only in cases relating directly to national security. The following Supreme Court decision illustrates this principle. Во многих странах предварительное ограниче- ние (на публикацию документов) — цензура ин- формации перед ее опубликованием — является обычным способом, при помощи которого пра- вительство осуществляет контроль над информа- цией и ограничивает свободу средств массовой информации. Однако Верховный Суд Соединен- ных Штатов постановил, что пресса может под- вергаться предварительной цензуре только в слу- чаях, напрямую связанных с угрозой националь- ной безопасности. Следующее решение Верхов- ного Суда иллюстрирует этот принцип.
101 Texts on Law 265 In The Pentagon Papers Case the Supreme Court reaffirmed its position. In 1971 a Pentagon employee leaked to The New York Times a secret government report outlining the history of the United States involvement in the Vietnam War. This report, which became known as the Pentagon Papers, contained hundreds of government documents, many of them being secret cables, memos, and plans. Realizing that the Pentagon Papers showed that former government officials had lied to the American people about the war, The New York Times began to publish parts of the report. The government tried to stop further publication of the papers, arguing that national security would be endangered and that the documents had been stolen from the Defense Department. A divided Court rejected the government’s claims. The Court ruled that stopping publication would be prior restraint. Writing on behalf of the majority, Justice William Douglas noted that “the dominant purpose of the First Amendment to the Constitution declaring the freedom of the press was to prohibit the widespread practice of governmental suppression of embarrassing information.” He added: “The press was protected so that it could bare the secrets of government and inform the people ... The press is to serve the governed and not the governors.” В деле о документах Пентагона Верховный Суд закрепил свою позицию (по этому вопросу). В 1971 году сотрудник Пентагона выдал газете “Нью-Йорк Таймс” секретный правительствен- ный отчет/доклад, освещающий историю участия США в войне во Вьетнаме. Этот отчет, получив- ший известность под названием “Документы Пен- тагона”, содержал сотни правительственных бу- маг, в числе которых было множество секретных телеграмм, справок и планов. Придя к выводу, что “Документы Пентагона” сви- детельствовали о том, что бывшие правитель- ственные чиновники предоставляли американ- скому народу ложную информацию об этой войне, газета “Нью-Йорк Таймс” начала публи- кацию частей этого отчета. Правительство пред- приняло попытку остановить дальнейшую пуб- ликацию этих документов, утверждая, что это будет угрожать национальной безопасности и что эти документы были похищены из Министерства Обороны. Хотя мнения судей по этому вопросу раздели- лись, суд отклонил иск правительства. Суд по- становил, что запрет на публикацию будет рас- сматриваться как предварительное ограничение. Выражая мнение большинства членов Суда, судья Уильям Дуглас отметил, что “основная цель Первой поправки к Конституции, провозглаша- ющей свободу печати, — не допустить утаивание компрометирующей информации, часто практи- куемое правительством”. Он также заметил: “Мы защитили свободу прессы для того, чтобы она могла раскрывать секреты правительства и ин- формировать общественность... Именно инте- ресам общественности, а не правителей долж- на служить пресса”.
266 The Best of Just English IV. Комментарий к тексту • nation — страна — Необходимо избежать напрашивающего- ся перевода этого слова как “нация” и выбрать нужное значение из словарной статьи. • ...is a common way for government to control information... — ... является обычным способом, при помощи которого правительство осуществляет контроль над информацией... — в ряде случаев при переводе имеет смысл добавить поясняющее слово или выражение. См. также далее в тексте: с угрозой, по этому вопросу, он также заметил, что... • In the United States, however, the Supreme Court has ruled... — Однако Верховный Суд Соединенных Штатов постановил... — Сле- дует обратить внимание на порядок слов в русском переводе. • the New York Times — Нью-Йорк Таймс — Названия журналов и газет не переводятся, а даются в транслитерации. • about the war — об этой войне; of the papers — этого отчета — Это один из тех случаев, когда из контекста ясно, какая именно война и какой отчет имеются в виду. • a divided Court... —Хотя мнения судей по этому вопросу раз- делились... — Здесь нужно прибегнуть к пояснительному переводу. • Writing on behalf of the majority... — Выражая мнение боль- шинства... — В связи с отсутствием в русском языке деепричастия от глагола “писать”, следует перефразировать все выражение. • ... inform the people... — информировать общественность... — Следует выбрать стилистически подходящий вариант перевода. • The press is to servethe governed and notthe governors. —Именно интересам общественности, а не правителей должна служить прес- са. — В английском предложении в центре внимания находится про- тивопоставление the governed and not the governors. Для адекватного перевода необходимо изменить порядок слов в русском варианте. Также следует обратить внимание на собирательный характер слов the governed и the governors. V. Образец ответов на вопросы по содержанию текста 1. Is there censorship of information in the US? Yes, there is, but, according to the Supreme Court’s decision, the press may be censored in
101 Texts on Law 267 advance only in cases when national security is endangered. 2. What event in American history is the Pentagon Papers Case related to? The Pentagon Papers Case is related to the Vietnam War. 3. Why did the Court reject the government’s claims? The Supreme Court rejected the government’s claims on the grounds that stopping the publication of the documents would be contrary to the First Amendment to the US Constitution. or ...on the grounds that the press should be protected to ensure that the people are well informed about the activities of their government. 4. Whose interests do you think the press should serve in a democratic society? As it is mentioned in the text, the press is to serve the_govemed and not the governors — so it should serve the interests of the people. VI. Грамматические вопросы к тексту 1. Общий вопрос (General Question / Yes— No Question) Is prior restraint a common way for government to control information? 2. Специальный вопрос (Special Question / Wh— Question) Why did the government try to stop further publication of the papers?
268 The Best of Just English 3. Альтернативный вопрос (Alternative Question) Was William Douglas a Supreme Court Justice or a Pentagon employee? 4. Разделительный вопрос (Disjunctive Question / Tag Question) The Supreme Court rejected the government’s claims, didn’t it? 5. Вопрос к подлежащему (Question referring to the subject of the sentence / Who— What Question) Who began to publish parts of the report?

270 The Best of Just English AUTOCRACY Governments can be classified in many ways. The most time-honored system comes from the ideas of the ancient Greek philosopher, Aristotle*. It is based on a key question: Who governs the state? Under this system of classification, all governments belong to one of the three major groups: autocracy—rule by one person; oligarchy — rule by a few persons; and democracy — rule by many persons. Any system of government in which the power and authority to rule are in the hands of a single individual is an autocracy. This is the oldest and one of the most common forms of government. Historically, most autocrats have maintained their positions of authority by inheritance or the ruthless use of military or police power. Several forms of autocracy exist. One is absolute or totalitarian dictatorship. In a totalitarian dictatorship, the ideas of a single leader or group of leaders are glorified. The government seeks to control all aspects of social and economic life. In such dictatorships, government is not responsible to the people, and the people lack the power to limit their rulers. Monarchy is another form of autocratic government. In a monarchy a king or a queen or an emperor exercises the supreme powers of government. Monarchs usually inherit their positions. Absolute monarchs have complete and unlimited power to rule their people. Absolute monarchs are rare today, but from the 1400s to the 1700s, kings or queens with absolute powers ruled most of Western Europe. These monarchs based their power on the idea of divine right. This view held that God granted those of royal birth the right to rule their people. Any challenge to or revolt against a monarch was regarded as a sin as well as treason. During the 17th and 18th centuries in Europe, the belief that the people were sovereign replaced this idea. The ruler’s power came not from God but from the people. 1. Who is an autocrat? 2. What are the forms of autocracy? 3. How have the ideas about the forms of government developed through the centuries? Aristotle — ['aeristotl] — Аристотель
101 Texts on Law 271 MONARCHY Monarchy is a form of government in which one person has the hereditary right to rule as head of state during his or her lifetime; the term is also applied to the state so governed. The power of the monarch varies from absolute to very limited. Throughout history many monarchs have enjoyed absolute power, which, they claimed, was granted by God. By the Middle Ages the monarchical system of government had spread over Europe. It was often based on the need for a strong ruler who could raise and command military forces to defend the country. European monarchies were dynastic, and the throne usually passed to the eldest son. With the rise of nation-states, power became centralized in the hands of the sovereigns. At first these rulers were supported by the growing middle class, or bourgeoisie, who benefited from a strong central government that maintained order and provided a stable atmosphere in which trade could flourish. However, abuses of power, so frequent during this period, put an end to many absolute monarchies. Revolutions in England in the 17th century and in France in the 18th century were major landmarks in the limitation of absolute power. The modem concept of a limited, constitutional monarchy arose slowly throughout much of Europe. During the 19th century, parliamentary authority grew while royal power became limited. Most of the modem monarchies perform merely ceremonial functions and are considered the symbols of national identity. I. What is monarchy? 2. Why did monarchies spread in Europe? 3. Why did bourgeoisie support monarchy at first? 4. How did the attitude to monarchy change during the 17—18‘h centuries? 10 — 9099
272 The Best of Just English WESTERN MONARCHIES Monarchy is a form of government in which one person has the hereditary right to rule as head of state during his or her lifetime; the term is also applied to the state so governed. The power of the monarch varies from absolute to very limited; the latter is exemplified in modern-day constitutional monarchies and throughout history many monarchs have wielded absolute power, sometimes based on their presumed divinity. By the Middle Ages the monarchical system of government had spread over Europe, often based on the need for a strong ruler who could raise and command military forces to defend the country. European monarchies were dynastic, with the throne usually being passed on to the eldest son or nearest male descendant. Many medieval rulers obtained soldiers and weapons from the feudal lords and thus were dependent on the allegiance of the nobility to maintain their power. With the decline of feudalism and the rise of nation-states, power became centralized in the hands of the sovereigns. At first these rulers were supported by the growing middle class, or bourgeoisie, who benefited from a strong central government that maintained order and provided a stable atmosphere in which trade could flourish. However, abuses of power, as well as growing dissatisfaction among the bourgeoisie, helped bring about the end to many absolute monarchies; revolutions in England in the 17th century and in France in the 18th century were major landmarks in the limitation of absolute power. The modem concept of a limited, constitutional monarchy arose slowly throughout much of Europe. During the 19th century, parliamentary authority grew while royal power diminished. Many Western monarchies ceased to exist after World War I, including those in Russia, Germany, and Austria. Some constitutional monarchies still survive, primarily as symbols of national unity. Among the most enduring are those of Great Britain, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Belgium. I. What definition of monarchy do we find in the text? 2. What was the general tendency of the development of monarchy throughout the centuries? 3. Name two major landmarks in the limitation of monarch’s absolute power. What are the most enduring monarchies of modern Europe?
101 Texts on Law 273 OLIGARCHY Over the centuries, people have organized their governments in many different ways. In Saudi Arabia, for example, the ruling royal family controls the government and its resources. Family members choose the king from among themselves. Thousands of miles away, in Burkina Faso in Africa, a small group of wealthy landowners and military officers governs that country. In Sweden the people elect the Riksdag, the national legislature, which in turn selects the prime minister to carry out the laws. The United States has established a representative democratic government that has served as a model for many other countries around the world. Yet other forms of government outnumber true democracies. Governments can be classified in many ways. The most time-honored system comes from the ideas of the ancient Greek philosopher, Aristotle. It is based on a key question: Who governs the state? Under this system of classification, all governments belong to one of the three major groups: autocracy — rule by one person; oligarchy — rule by a few persons; and democracy — rule by many persons. An oligarchy is any system of government in which a small group holds power. The group derives its power from wealth, military power, social position, or a combination of these elements. Sometimes religion is the source of power. Both dictatorships and oligarchies sometimes claim they rule for the people. Such governments may try to give the appearance of control by the people. They might hold elections, but offer only one candidate, or control the election results in other ways. Such governments may also have some type of legislature or national assembly elected by or representing the people. These legislatures, however, only approve policies and decisions already made by the leaders. As in a dictatorship, oligarchies usually suppress all political opposition — sometimes ruthlessly. 1. What is oligarchy? 2. What is Aristotle's classification of the types of government? 3. *What do you think is the difference between oligarchy and dictatorship? 10*
274 The Best of Just English DEMOCRACY A democracy is any system of government in which rule is by the people. The term democracy comes from the Greek demos (meaning “the people”) and kratia (meaning “rule”). The ancient Greeks used the word democracy to mean government by the many in contrast to government by the few. Pericles*, a great leader of ancient Athens, declared, “Our constitution is named a democracy because it is in the hands not of the few, but of the many.” The key idea of democracy is that the people hold sovereign power. Abraham Lincoln best captured this spirit by describing democracy as “government of the people, by the people, and for the people.” Democracy may take one of the two basic forms. Indirect democracy the people govern themselves by voting on issues individually as citizens. Direct democracy exists only in very small societies where citizens can actually meet regularly to discuss and decide key issues and problems. Direct democracy is still found in some New England town meetings and in some of the smaller states, called cantons of Switzerland. No country today, however, has a government based on direct democracy. In indirect or representative democracy the people elect representatives and give them the responsibility and power to make laws and conduct government. An assembly of the people’s representatives may be called a council, a legislature, a congress, or a parliament. Representative democracy is practiced in cities, states, provinces, and countries where the population is too large to meet regularly in one place. Nowadays, the terms representative democracy, republic, and constitutional republic mean the same thing: a system of limited government where the people are the ultimate source of governmental power. 1. What is the key idea of democracy? 2. Describe the two basic forms of democracy. 3. Why is it impossible to establish direct democracy within a whole state? * Pericles— ['penkli:z] —Перикл
101 Texts on Law 275 ELEMENTS OF DEMOCRACY All genuine democracies have free and open elections. Free elections give people the chance to choose their leaders and to voice their opinions on various issues. Free elections also help ensure that public officials pay attention to the wishes of the people. In a democracy, several characteristics mark free elections. First, everyone’s vote carries the same weight — a principle often expressed in the phrase “one person, one vote.” Second, all candidates have the right to express their views freely, giving voters access to competing ideas. Third, citizens are free to help candidates or support issues. Fourth, the legal requirements for voting, such as age, residence, and citizenship, are kept to a minimum. Thus, racial, ethnic, religious, or other discriminatory tests cannot be used to restrict voting. Fifth, citizens may vote freely by secret ballot, without fear of punishment for their voting decisions. Political parties are another important element of democratic government. A political party is a group of individuals with broad common interests who organize to nominate candidates for office, win elections, conduct government, and determine public policy. In the United States, while any number of political parties may compete, a two-party system in which the Republicans and the Democrats have become the major political parties has developed. Rival parties help make elections meaningful. They give voters a choice among candidates. They also help simplify and focus attention on key issues for voters. Finally, in democratic countries, the political party or parties that are out of power serve as a “loyal opposition.” That is, by criticizing the policies and actions of the party in power, they can help make those in power more responsible to the people. 1. What are the basic elements of democratic government? 2. What is the meaning of the principle "one person, one vote"? 3. What is the role of rival parties in elections?
276 The Best of Just English CHARACTERISTICS OF DEMOCRACY A true democratic government, as opposed to one that only uses the term democracy in its name, has some characteristics that distinguish it from other forms of government. The first one may be called individual liberty. No individual, of course, can be completely free to do absolutely anything he or she wants. That would result in chaos. Rather, democracy requires that all people be as free as possible to develop their own capacities. This does not mean that all people are bom with equal talents or deserve an equal share of material goods. Rather, it means that they should have an equal opportunity to develop their talents to the fullest extent possible. Government in a democracy works to promote that kind of equality. Democracy also requires that government decisions be based on majority rule. In a democracy, people usually accept decisions made by the majority of voters in a free election. Representative democracy means that laws enacted in the legislatures represent the will of the majority of lawmakers. Because these lawmakers are elected by the people, the laws are accepted by the people. At the same time, the American concept of democracy includes a concern about the possible tyranny of the majority. The Constitution helps to ensure that the rights of the majority as well as of the minority will be protected. Respect for minority rights can be difficult to maintain, especially when society is under great stress. For example, during World War II, the government imprisoned more than 100,000 Japanese Americans in relocation camps because it feared they would be disloyal. In recent years, however, this wartime action has been severely criticized as an unjustified denial of individual rights and as proof that tyranny can occur in even the most democratic societies. 1. What is meant by individual liberty in a democracy? 2. What is the role of government in a democracy? 3. What is majority rule? 4. How do you understand democracy?
101 Texts on Law 277 THE SOIL OF DEMOCRACY Today relatively few nations practice democracy. One reason may be that real democracy seems to require a special environment. Democracy seems to have a better chance in countries that do not have extremes of wealth and poverty and that have a large middle class. The opportunity to control one’s economic decisions provides a base for making independent political decisions. If people do not have the power to control their own economic lives, they will not likely be free to make political decisions. Countries with stable, growing economies seem better able to support democratic government. In the past, some politicians who promised citizens jobs and food have toppled many democratic governments during times of severe economic depression. People who are out of work or unable to feed their families often become more concerned about security than about voting or exercising other political rights. Democracy prospers where most people accept democratic values such as individual liberty and equality for all. Such countries are said to have a social consensus. Countries divided by disagreements about basic values may have difficulty supporting democratic governments. History shows that conditions in the American colonies favored the growth of democracy. Most white people had an opportunity to get ahead economically. The American colonists were among the most educated people of the world at the time. The English heritage provided a general consensus of political and social values. I. What ‘special environment’ does democracy require? 2. Why does democracy have a better chance in stable societies with a large middle class? 3. Why did democracy develop in the American colonies?

THE ROOTS OF BRITISH GOVERNMENT
280 The Best of Just English THE ANGLO-SAXON KINGS In the Dark Ages* during the fifth and sixth centuries, communities of peoples in Britain inhabited homelands with ill-defined borders. Such communities were organised and led by chieftains or kings. Following the final withdrawal of the Roman legions from the provinces of Britannia in around 408 A.D. these small kingdoms were left to preserve their own order and to deal with invaders and waves of migrant peoples such as the Picts, the Scots from Ireland and Germanic tribes from the continent. By 650 A.D., the British Isles were a patchwork of many kingdoms founded from native or immigrant communities and led by powerful chieftains or kings. In their personal feuds and struggles between communities for control and supremacy, a small number of kingdoms became dominant. Until the late seventh century, a series of warrior-kings in turn established their own personal authority over other kings, usually won by force or through alliances and often cemented by dynastic marriages. The most famous of these kings was Ethelberht**, the King of Kent (reigned 560—616), who became the first English king to be converted to Christianity. Ethelberht’s law code was the first to be written in any Germanic language and included 90 laws. In the eighth century, smaller kingdoms in the British Isles continued to fall to more powerful kingdoms, which claimed rights over whole areas. In England, Mercia and later Wessex came to dominate, giving rise to the start of the monarchy. 1. How were the British communities organized in the Dark Ages? 2. What was the pattern of British life by 650 A.D.? 3. What was the King of Kent famous for? * the Dark Ages — раннее средневековье ** Ethelberht — ['e0alba:t] — Этельберт, король Кента
101 Texts on Law 281 ALFRED THE GREAT It is not possible to point to any one figure in the history of the English monarchy and say, simply, ‘he or she began it all’. Nonetheless, the story did receive a tremendous, even a decisive, forward impulse from Alfred of Wessex, King of the English as he styled himself on his coins, and Leader of the Christians as he was called by his devoted biographer Asser. He is the only English ruler to have been popularly accepted as “Great”, and his position, both in British history as a whole and in the development of the monarchy in particular, is unique. We know more about Alfred than about any other king of England before William the Conqueror, and the first features of his character to emerge are those of the warrior and commander. Succeeding to the throne at a time when the Viking invasions were rising to a crescendo, Alfred had at one stage to struggle for bare survival but recovered to win the greatest victory at Edington. This successful campaign diminished the Viking threat, but could not remove it, and in the later part of his reign Alfred’s role as an active soldier was less important than his work as a strategist and an architect of victory. He also advanced his defensive frontiers by creating a naval force, to patrol the coasts and meet invaders before they could deploy through the countryside. For this innovation, he is honoured as father of the Royal Navy. The same quality of originality that enabled Alfred to develop from a warrior into a military administrator inspired him to make his court in peacetime a centre of culture and religion worthy of European renown. Legislation and administration in the modem sense were not seen as significant parts of the duties of a Saxon king, but Alfred’s general concern for the quality of life, and the breadth of his vision, were such that he was naturally led to codify and promulgate laws, and spend time dispensing justice-activities which thereby became for subsequent generations part of the expected activity of a good king. Alfred was an avid collector of other men’s talents; but he is still more remarkable in that he was participant as well as patron in the culture of his brilliant court. 1. What were the prominent features of Alfred the Great’s character? 2. What were the main developments of his reign? 3. Why is he honoured as father of the Royal Navy? 4. What role did Alfred the Great play in the development of Anglo-Saxon law?
282 The Best of Just English WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR William the Conqueror was descended from Viking freebooters and warlords who, from the middle of the ninth century, first plundered and then settled north-western France. He inherited his Duchy when only a boy, and the desperate struggle for survival that preoccupied his early years probably reinforced his natural tendency towards ruthlessness and resolution. He was a hard man in every sense - a ferocious warrior, a harsh ruler, a driving administrator and a man of vigorous principles. His willpower was massive and his temper was fearsome. He claimed the English throne both on the grounds of a supposed act of‘designation’ on the part of Edward the Confessor*, while the latter was in his long Norman exile, and of a shadowy promise extorted from Harold in 1064. In reality, it was force of arms that mattered, and remarkably good luck. The invasion of 1066 was a gigantic gamble, and William swept the board. Saxon resistance flared and spluttered for some years after the battle at Hastings, where Harold was killed, thus putting an end to Saxon England, but William put down all outbreaks with relentless severity. The Saxon nobility were largely destroyed and almost totally dispossessed, in favour of Norman knights, and a similar process was applied to the Church. William set his grip on England and changed it to suit his needs. The common people were still able to invoke the customary laws, but in great matters such as land tenure, taxation and military organisation the Normans developed a system of their own. The first aim of the Normans after their invasion of Britain was to establish a strong central government; and William I set about achieving this by appropriating all the land to himself, extending feudalism to the whole country, and then granting holdings to his most important followers. The changes made by the Normans were ones of standardisation. In their plan to centralise government under strong Royal authority they created conditions in which a uniform and central law could be established. It was a system that in some ways went beyond what was to be found in Normandy itself. 1. What was William's ancestry? 2. What events in his childhood built up William's character? 3. What were the most prominent features of William's character? 4. What were William I’s main achievements in government, law and administration? * Edward the Confessor — король Эдуард Исповедник
101 Texts on Law 283 JOHN I* Everyone seems to know Richard the Lion Heart, who is praised in legends and adored by romantic writers, but his brother John, who had to carry the burden of the administration of the country while his brother was winning glory and losing troops in Crusades is only remembered because he was the enemy of Robin Hood. Reality, however, was different from popular stereotypes. It fell to John I to meet the series of internal upheavals and external assaults, which, almost inevitably, assailed the unmanageably vast empire. He faced these challenges with indomitable vigour and much ability, but fought a losing battle and died in the shadow of failure. In John’s attempt to maintain his position, he rode roughshod over the Church and many of the nobility. His clash with the clergy caused England to be placed under Papal interdict between 1208 and 1214, and involved John in excommunication from 1209 to 1213. Subsequently, however, the Pope became John’s closest ally. A rebellious faction of the nobility forced John in 1215 to concede a list of privileges, which has achieved almost legendary status as the Magna Carta. “The cornerstone of the British liberties,” was how subsequent generations came to see it, though the fact of the King being forced to make concessions was more important than the concessions themselves. John’s reputation was radically affected by the outcome of these quarrels, and he received less than was due for his abilities as a brilliant commander in land warfare, an imaginative pioneer of naval defence and an inventive and energetic administrator. John’s greatest problem was the disloyalty of his barons. The lords of John’s French lands were bound to develop French rather than English alliances, and it can be argued that losing Normandy John clarified the future for the kingdom of England. 1. What is the popular sentiment on John I? 2. What challenges in ruling the British Empire did John have to face? 3. What is the main legal development of John's time? King John — Иоанн Безземельный, английский король (1199—1216)
284 The Best of Just English THE ORIGIN OF THE MAGNA CARTA к ___ The Magna Carta*, the charter of English / 17Гft f s liberties was granted by King John** in 1215 J VI; г under the threat of civil war and reissued with ffilagaa / alterations in 1216, 1217, and 1225. f tiartaJ The Charter meant less to contemporaries \ than it has to subsequent generations. The . i i«-r^ z > solemn circumstances of its first granting have L ч CX// given to the Magna Carta of 1215 a unique place in popular imagination. Quite early in its history it became a symbol and a battle cry У against oppression, each successive generation reading into it in search for protection of its < • own threatened liberties. In England the Petition of Right (1628) and the Habeas Corpus Act (1679) looked directly back to clause 39 of the Charter of 1215, which stated that “no free man shall be seized or imprisoned or stripped of his rights and possessions, or outlawed or exiled, or deprived of his standing in any other way [...] except by the lawful judgment of his peers or by the law of the land.” In the United States both the national and the state constitutions show ideas and even phrases directly traceable to the Magna Carta. Earlier kings of England, Henry I, Stephen, and Henry II, had issued charters, making promises to their barons. But these were granted by, not exacted from, the king and were very generally phrased. Later the tension between the Kings and the nobility increased. Since 1199 John’s barons had to be promised their rights. It is, therefore, not surprising that Stephen Langton, archbishop of Canterbury, directed baronial unrest into a demand for a solemn grant of liberties by the king. The document known as the Articles of the Barons was at last agreed upon and became the text from which the final version of the charter was drafted and sealed by John on June 15, 1215. 1. What is the historical significance of the Magna Carta? 2. What documents of constitutional importance reflect the ideas ofthe Magna Carta? 3. What political situation necessitated the granting of the Magna Carta? Magna Carta — Великая Хартия Вольностей
101 Texts on Law 285 THE CONTENTS OF THE MAGNA CARTA At the heart of the English system are two principles of government — limited government and representative government. The idea that government was not all-powerfiil first appeared in the Magna Carta, or Great Charter of 1215. The principle of limited government established by the Magna Carta, meant that the power of the monarch, or government, was limited, not absolute. The document provided for protection against unjust punishment and the loss of life, liberty, and property except according to law. It stipulated that no citizen could be punished or kept in prison without a fair trial. Under the Magna Carta, the king agreed that certain taxes could not be levied without popular consent. The Charter consisted of a preamble and 63 clauses. Roughly, its contents may be divided into nine groups. The first concerned the church, asserting that it was to be “free.” The second group provided statements of feudal law of particular concern to those holding lands directly from the crown, and the third assured similar rights to subtenants. The fourth group of clauses referred to towns, trade, and merchants. A particularly large group was concerned with the reform of the law and of justice, and another with control of the behaviour of royal officials. The seventh group concerned the royal forests, and another dealt with immediate issues, requiring, for instance, the dismissal of John’s foreign mercenaries. The final clauses provided a form of security for the king’s adherence to the charter, by which a council of 25 barons had the ultimate right to levy war upon him should he seriously infringe it. Although the Magna Carta was originally intended to protect aristocracy and not the ordinary citizens, it came in time to be regarded as a cornerstone of British liberties. It is one of the oldest written constitutional papers. 7. What were the two basic principles of the English system of government at the beginning of the 13th century?* How do you understand these principles? 2. What provisions did the Magna Carta contain? 3. Who enjoyed the rights granted by the Magna Carta?
286 The Best of Just English LEGAL AND CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENTS IN BRITAIN Within England an increasingly firm and diverse society flowered, made possible by the internal peace maintained by a strong monarchy. Henry II gave significant impetus to the development of a system of royal justice that superseded feudal courts. From this there grew up the system of Common Law, based on the decisions of the king’s judges, who traveled around the country. In contrast to Roman civil law and the church’s canon law, common law reflected the customs and instincts of the English people, who were beginning to recover influence. Norman lawyers helped to codify it. Its very flexibility and adaptability (like the empirical spirit of British philosophy later) was to ensure its future importance among English- speaking peoples all over the world, especially in the United States. A step of later constitutional significance was taken with the granting of the Magna Carta in 1215. The document itself registered feudal concessions extracted by the barons and the church from King John. The Magna Carta became more important in time, especially with the development of Parliament. This institution was also to have major significance in all English- speaking countries. Many medieval states had comparable institutions, but none with such a future. Parliament was in origin an extension of the Royal Council, in which the king consulted magnates from all over the realm. In 1265 the baronial leader Simon de Montfort summoned a Parliament that also included local gentry from each county and middle- class people of the leading towns. Thus for the first time the whole country was represented—or, at least, all the active elements who ran it. Thereafter, these representatives were generally consulted in times of national emergency — as during foreign wars or rebellions — that necessitated the raising of money. I. What did you learn from the text about the system of Common Law? 2. Why can the Magna Carta be considered a document of constitutional significance? 3. Describe the role of the early Parliament in running the county s affairs?
101 Texts on Law 287 THE PLANTAGENETS In Britain the Plantagenet* period was dominated by three major conflicts at home and abroad. Edward I attempted to create a British empire dominated by England, conquering Wales and pronouncing his eldest son Prince of Wales, and then attacking Scotland. Scotland was to remain elusive and retain its independence until late in the reign of the Stuart kings. In the reign of Edward III the Hundred Years War began, a struggle between England and France. At the end of the Plantagenet period, the reign of Richard II saw the beginning of the long spell of civil feuding known as the War of the Roses**. For the next century, the crown would be disputed by two conflicting family strands, the Lancastrians and the Yorkists. The period also saw the development of new social institutions and a distinctive English culture. Parliament emerged and grew. The judicial reforms begun in the reign of Henry II were continued and completed by Edward I. Culture began to flourish. Three Plantagenet kings were patrons of Geoffrey Chaucer, the father of English poetry. Westminster Abbey was rebuilt and the majority of English cathedrals remodelled. Franciscan and Dominican orders began to be established in England, while the universities of Oxford and Cambridge had their origins in this period. Amidst the order of learning and art, however, were disturbing new phenomena. The outbreak of plague or the ‘Black Death’ served to undermine military campaigns and cause huge social turbulence, killing half the country’s population. The price rises and labour shortage, which resulted, led to social unrest, culminating in the Peasants’ Revolt in 1381. 1. What were the three main conflicts of the Plantagenet period? 2. What changes occurred in Britain at that period? 3. What was the background of the Peasants ’ Revolt? * the Plantagenet— [plaen'taedjinit] — Плантагенеты, королевская династия ** the War of the Roses — ист. война Алой и Белой розы
288 The Best of Just English THE TUDORS The history of the English Crown is long and varied. The concept of a single ruler unifying different tribes based in England developed in the early period of history. The Middle Ages saw several fierce contests for the Crown, culminating in the Wars of the Roses, which lasted for nearly a century. The conflict was finally ended with the advent of the Tudors, the dynasty, which produced some England’s most successful rulers and a flourishing cultural Renaissance. The five sovereigns of the Tudor dynasty are among the most well- known figures in Royal history. Of Welsh origin, Henry VII succeeded in ending the Wars of the Roses between the houses of Lancaster and York to found the highly successful Tudor house. Henry VII, his son Henry VIII and his three children Edward VI, Mary I and Elizabeth I ruled for 118 eventful years. During this period, England developed into one of the leading European colonial powers, with men such as Sir Walter Raleigh taking part in the conquest of the New World. Nearer to home, campaigns in Ireland brought the country under strict English control. Culturally and socially, the Tudor period saw many changes. The Tudor court played a prominent part in the cultural Renaissance taking place in Europe, nurturing all-round individuals such as William Shakespeare, Edmund Spenser and Cardinal Wolsey. The Tudor period also saw the turbulence of two changes of official religion, resulting in the martyrdom of many innocent believers of both Protestantism and Roman Catholicism. The fear of Roman Catholicism induced by the Reformation was to last for several centuries and to play an influential role in the history of the Succession. The end of the Tudor line with the death of the ‘Virgin Queen’ in 1603 brought about the Union of the Crowns with Scotland. 1. Which Tudor sovereigns are the most renowned? 2. What events won the Tudors glory? 3. What did the changes in official religion result in?
101 Texts on Law 289 HENRY VI The long reign of Henry VI was as disastrous as the short reign of his father had been glorious. The regencies of his childhood, although at first successful, established a pattern of ambition among the nobility which ran out of control as time went by. Henry was a man of weak will, no better than simple-minded in the eyes of his enemies. He was out of his depth in the vicious intrigues of his Court, under the pressures of which he suffered periodic bouts of nervous collapse. His preoccupations were with scholarship, music, architecture, the worship of God and the creation of ordered communities in which men could follow regular lives devoted to the pursuit of truth and beauty. He founded Eton and King’s College, Cambridge, but lost all his father’s conquests in France, and failed to stop England sliding into terrible convulsions of the War of the Roses. The French, formerly demoralised, were rallied by Joan of Arc* in 1429, and the diplomacy of the continental war** was radically altered by a change of alliances in 1435. At home, the decay of feudalism, that filled England with armed men bearing the badges of rival lords, posed problems of enormous size and complexity. Normandy was finally lost in 1450 and Gascony in 1451. The civil war in England between the followers of Richard, Duke of York, a descendant of Edward III, and the royal (or Lancastrian) party dominated by Henry’s formidable wife Margaret of Anjou, swayed to and fro from the early 1450s. Henry himself was more victim than actor in all this: mad, imprisoned, deposed and restored, he was a mere pawn in the game. Henry was murdered in the Tower in 1471. 1. Why was Henry VI considered to be a man of weak will? 2. What were Henry’s main preoccupations? 3. What were the results of Henry's foreign policy? * Joan of Arc — Жанна д ’Арк ** continental war — война в Европе
290 The Best of Just English HENRY VIII Henry VIII stands out as a colossus among English kings. Gigantic in appetites, destructiveness and creativity, he slammed the door of history on the Middle Ages and thrust England into a new era. In his youth Henry was a splendid figure, strong, skilled in every physical and artistic accomplishment, fearsome and generous. Henry flung away his father’s carefully hoarded treasure in wild pursuit of foreign adventures that signified little and brought no reward. England alone had sufficient weight to stand up to the imperial super- states which emerged in Europe at the end of the fifteenth century. More money was soon needed and one of the great themes of the reign began to emerge, the King’s willingness to take any action which would satisfy his need for cash. A second motive, no less powerful, began to emerge in the late 1520s, the need for a male heir. And when his wife Catherine of Aragon, who was the widow of Henry’s elder brother Arthur, failed to produce a living son, Henry convinced himself that this must be because the marriage was invalid in the eyes of God. An annulment could only come from the Pope — but the Pope was under the influence of Catherine’s nephew, the King of Spain. So began a conflict with Rome, which led to the dissolution of the monasteries (1536—1539) and the establishment of a national State Church. No single episode is more important in the whole English history. Almost at a blow, Henry shattered the whole medieval ecclesiastical culture, and prepared the way for renewed religious, social and economic activity. After Catherine of Aragon, Henry married five more times. His last wife outlived him, but by then two had been divorced, one had died in childbirth, and two more were executed. I. What made Henry VIII a conspicuous figure among English kings? 2. What were the reasons for Henry's conflict with the Pope? 3. Why was Henry's divorce with Catherine of Aragon a matter of great historic consequence?
101 Texts on Law 291 ELIZABETH I Queen Elizabeth I was one of the strongest rulers in England’s history. She was the last of the Tudor’s dynasty, the daughter of Henry VIII and his second wife, Anne Boleyn. Elizabeth had a difficult early childhood. Her mother was executed when she was only three years old, and during her sister Mary’s reign (1553—1558) she was a prisoner. Elizabeth received a first-class education, excelling in foreign languages (including French, Latin, and Spanish), science, and mathematics. In 1558, after the death of Mary, Elizabeth became queen. She was to lead country with great shrewdness and courage throughout turbulent and often dangerous times. She suppressed several Catholic plots against her Protestant regime. In 1587, Elizabeth had her Catholic cousin, Mary, Queen of Scots, executed because Mary became a focus of rebellion against her. In 1588, her navy defeated the Armada, a fleet sent by the Catholic king Philip II of Spain to invade England. Known as the virgin queen, Elizabeth never married, although she had many suitors. The most famous of these was Lord Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester. She gave backing to adventurers such as Sir Francis Drake, which made their explorations possible. During her reign English culture flourished, producing such renowned writers as Edmund Spenser, Christopher Marlowe, and William Shakespeare. In a world that was prejudiced against women, Elizabeth I ruled successfully. She once said: “I know I have the body of a week and feeble woman, but I have the heart and stomach of a king, and of a king of England, too.” She was succeeded by the Scottish king James VI. I. How did Elizabeth spend her childhood? 2. What were the major political landmarks of Elizabeth’s reign? 3. ^Comment on Elizabeth's famous words: “I know I have the body of a week and feeble woman, but I have the heart and stomach ofa king, and of a king ofEngland, too. ”
292 The Best of Just English CHARLES I AND THE CIVIL WAR One of the chief threads that make up the pattern of English history, a thread that runs through it from the earliest times almost to our present day, is the struggle between the king and the people (or the Parliament) to decide which should be supreme. At first for many centuries the king was all-powerful, but gradually his powers were reduced and those of Parliament built up until now it is the Parliament that, in all but name, is the chief power in the land. And in this long struggle one of the most decisive moments came in the seventeenth century. Charles I was on the throne. As a man he was admirable, sincerely religious, a faithful husband and a loving father. As a king he was dishonourable and untrustworthy. He was brought up to believe in the “Divine Rights of Kings”, and hated the idea of a Parliament, believing that its only purpose was to vote the money that he thought necessary. To get the money he lightly gave any promise that Parliament asked for, and just as lightly broke that word of honour. Time and again he was trusted and time and again he was false to that trust, until it was forced on the people that no promise that he gave was of any value. At last, when Charles entered the House of Commons itself with the intention of arresting the five men who were the leaders of the party that opposed him, people realised that if freedom and truth and justice were to live at all there was no choice but to resist him by force. The actual fighting in the Civil War broke out in 1642. The Royalists fought bravely but not always shrewdly, and were eventually outmatched by the parliamentary forces. Seeing that his cause was lost, the king gave himself up and was imprisoned, brought to trial and found guilty of having made war on his people. He was sentenced to death and beheaded right outside the Whitehall palace. Politically, it was a totally unnecessary end, but Charles I faced it with impeccable courage and “nothing in his life became him like the leaving it”. I. What is one of the chief threads in the pattern of English history? 2. What features were characteristic of Charles I as a monarch? What were his personal qualities? 3. What were the main reasons for his constant disagreement with Parliament?
101 Texts on Law 293 THE ROYALISTS AND THE PARLIAMENTARIANS At first the tide of battle in the English Civil war of 1642—1649 went completely against the Parliamentary forces, and they were hopelessly defeated in almost every battle. It was natural that they should be. The majority of the country landowners and the wealthy men, most of whom had been trained in arms and had weapons and horses, supported Charles I. The Royalists were far more attractive than the Parliamentarians. They had learning, courtesy and good manners; they loved poetry, music and art. The Parliamentarians had none of this charm. They were mostly Puritans, men who wanted a simpler and plainer form of religion, and it led them to destroy pictures, the lovely stained-glass windows of churches and often the churches themselves. The Puritans dressed in plain clothes of dull colouring; their hair was cut close (they were even called “Roundheads”). To them all pleasures, even the most innocent, were sinful things. They scorned learning and art; they were bitterly intolerant to the opinions of their enemies and the pleasures of their friends. On the other side of the picture, they had a courage that no defeats could crush; they had a religious faith that inspired every act of their lives. But courage and faith are not enough to win battles. Leadership and training are necessary, too. The leader of the Parliamentary forces was Oliver Cromwell, a country gentleman from Huntingdon. He had been in Parliament, a rough, ungraceful figure, unskilful as a speaker but known for his strength of character and his deep sincerity and religious feeling. Cromwell saw that if the Parliamentary army was to be victorious it must not only be fearless and full of faith, but it must be as well trained. Cromwell gathered his soldiers for courage, strength, horsemanship and religious feeling. He trained his men in complete obedience, filled them with the desire to fight for freedom, Parliament and religion, combining the spiritual and the practical as in his famous order: “Trust in God, and keep your powder dry.” I. Why were Parliamentary forces defeated at the beginning of the Civil War? 2. What kind of people were Puritans? 3. What made Cromwell's army victorious? 4. How do you understand Cromwell’s words: "Trust in God, and keep your powder dry"?
294 The Best of Just English THE END OF THE CIVIL WAR The English Civil War was a struggle of the Parliamentarians against the Royalists. The Royalists fought bravely, but were eventually outmatched by the Parliamentarians. The latter won several battles, and finally at Naseby 1645, the king’s forces were completely defeated. Cromwell was now leader of the whole Parliamentary forces. Seeing that his cause was lost, the king gave himself up, and was imprisoned in the Isle of Wight. Finally he was brought to trial in London for having made war on his people and for being an enemy of his country. He was found guilty and sentenced to death. At his trial he behaved nobly and firmly, refusing to defend himself before a court which, he said, had no power to try him, and he received the death sentence with a calm courage. He was beheaded outside the Whitehall palace. Whatever may have been his faults in life, he bore himself like a real king in his last moments. Cromwell now became ruler of England, not as king but as “Protector of the Commonwealth”, and for ten years he ruled England firmly but well. He could be merciless — his treatment of Ireland is one of the blots on his character — yet in an age that was bitter with religious intolerance he was nobly tolerant. It was he who really united England, Scotland and Ireland, who enforced justice and order at home and made England stronger and more respected abroad than ever, and if he at times acted like a tyrant, he did it because in this, as in the execution of Charles, he saw that this was the only means of bringing order and peace in England. His rough nature, like his stem face, did not inspire affection but his strength, his unshakeable honesty and his sincere religion made him respected as one of the greatest Englishmen. 1. Why was Charles I sentenced to death? 2. What notable traits of character do you find in Charles I and Oliver Cromwell? 3. What is Cromwell’s contribution to England’s prosperity?
101 Texts on Law 295 THE DEVELOPMENT OF PARLIAMENT Cromwellian military rule was harsh and increasingly unpopular, so that most people wanted the restoration of the monarchy. The two houses of Parliament were re-established and in 1660 they restored the Stuart Charles II to the throne. Initially Charles cooperated with Parliament, but eventually his financial needs, his belief in the Divine right of kings to rule without opposition, and his support of the Catholic cause lost him popular and Parliamentary backing. Parliament then ended his expensive wars; forced him to sign the act that excluded Catholics and Protestant dissenters from holding public office, and passed the Habeas Corpus Act* in 1679, which stipulated that no citizen could be imprisoned without a fair and speedy trial. In addition to the growing power of Parliament against the monarch, the 17th century also saw the beginning of more organized political parties. These derived largely from the ideological and religious conflicts of the Civil War. Two groups became dominant, and this feature was to characterize future British two-party politics, in which political power was shifted between two main parties. The Whigs were mainly Cromwellian Protestants and gentry, who refused to accept Catholic James II as successor to Charles II, and who wanted religious freedom for all Protestants. The Tories generally supported royalist beliefs, and helped Charles II to secure James’s right to succeed him. But James’s subsequent behaviour resulted in a further reduction of royal influence. He attempted to rule without Parliament and ignored its rules. His manipulations eventually forced the Tories to join the Whigs in inviting the Protestant William of Orange to intervene. 1. Why did most people want the restoration of the monarchy? 2. What were the main developments of the 17th century? 3. What events led to further decrease of royal influence? * Habeus Corpus Act —Хабеас Корпус (английский закон 1679 г. о неприкосно- венности личности)
296 The Best of Just English CHARLES II Kings are easier to destroy than to replace, as those who executed Charles I found to their confusion. A source of authority had gone, and neither Parliament nor army was quite clear how to make good the deficiency. While Oliver Cromwell lived, his commanding personality held affairs together, though his rule was harsh and increasingly unpopular among both common people and aristocracy. His son, whom Oliver Cromwell chose as his heir, did not possess his father’s strength of character or ambition, so uncertainty prevailed after Cromwell’s death in 1658 until the army acted to bring back the monarchy, in the person of Charles II. The restored King was able, charming, and inflexible on only one point — his determination never again to ‘go on his travels’. So, although he and his courtiers set out to enjoy themselves with a dissolute abandon far removed from the morality and restraint of his father’s time, Charles II took care not to put himself into political danger at home. As it was, the commercial rivalry of Holland, and the looming power of France under Louis XIV, provided quite sufficient dangers from abroad. Two wars were fought against the Dutch, with varied success, and a rather devious policy of alliance with France was much disliked in England. These policies, nevertheless, resulted in a steady growth of British naval power and commercial prosperity. Charles was described by a contemporary as ‘an exact knower of mankind’, and in his cynical way he played his cards successfully right to the end. I. Why was Oliver Cromwell’s rule unpopular with common people and aristocracy? 2. Describe Charles Il’s personality. 3. What policy did Charles II implement?
101 Texts on Law 297 JAMES II AND THE GLORIOUS REVOLUTION James II was the younger son of Charles I. From an early age he proved brave and competent as a soldier and naval commander, and during the reign of Charles II he showed outstanding talent as administrator in charge of the great expansion of the Royal Navy. He was also serious- minded, humourless and stubborn — qualities which he inherited from his father. Unfortunately he completely lacked his brother’s cynical sense of self-preservation. When in 1672 he was converted by the example of his wife to Roman Catholicism, he provoked a storm, which could have been avoided, if he had chosen to do so. Repeated attempts were made to exclude him from the succession before Charles II died, but James ascended the throne in 1685 and promptly embarked upon a policy which was aimed at achieving arbitrary power for himself and the conversion of England to Roman Catholicism. The country would stand for neither of these, and in 1688 a formal invitation was sent to William, Prince of Orange, James’s son-in- law (and nephew). The invasion, which followed, met practically no resistance and was called ‘Glorious Revolution’. James fled to France, where he died in 1701. When the outcome of the invasion of 1688 was confirmed by special Convention Parliaments in England and Scotland, it was more than a change of face under the Crown. The monarchy was now a Parliamentary institution, and kings and queens of Great Britain have reigned ever since in accordance with rules and conventions agreed with Parliament. The definition of the sovereign body is ‘the King (or Queen) in Parliament’. Such a formula by no means reduces the monarchs to a position of insignificance. 1. What qualities did James IIpossess? 2. What policy carried out by James 11 led to “Glorious revolution ”? 3. What changes in the monarchy took place after the Revolution?
298 The Best of Just English THE PETITION OF RIGHT AND THE BILL OF RIGHTS In the beginning of the 17th century Parliament began to show more resistance to the monarchy under the Stuart succession from 1603 by using its gradually acquired weapon of financial control. It was influenced by the gentry and began to refuse royal requests for money. It eventually forced Charles I to sign the Petition of Right in 1628, which further restricted the monarch’s powers and was intended to prevent him from raising taxes without Parliament’s consent. Another document of constitutional importance is the Bill of Rights (1689). It is one of the basic instruments of the British constitution, the result of the long 17th-century struggle between the Stuart kings and the English people and Parliament. The Bill of Rights provided the foundation on which the government rested after the Revolution of 1688. The Revolution settlement made monarchy clearly conditional on the will of Parliament and provided a freedom from arbitrary government of which most Englishmen were notably proud during the 18th century. The main purpose of the act was unequivocally to declare illegal various practices of James II. Among such practices proscribed were the royal prerogative of dispensing with the law in certain cases, the complete suspension of laws without the consent of Parliament, and the levying of taxes and the maintenance of a standing army in peacetime without specific parliamentary authorization. A number of clauses sought to eliminate royal interference in parliamentary matters, stressing that elections must be free and that members of parliament must have complete freedom of speech. Certain forms of interference in the course of justice were also proscribed. The act also dealt with the proximate succession to the throne, provided the heirs were Protestants. It is the constitutional paper of great importance, which prevented the sovereign from abusing his authority. 1. What events preceded the Bill of Rights? 2. Why did King James II have to leave the country? 3. How were the rights of the monarch limited by the Bill of Rights? 4. What civil rights were protected by this document?
101 Texts on Law 299 WILLIAM OF ORANGE AND ANNE As the result of Glorious Revolution two monarchs ascended the British throne. They were William II and his wife Mary, who were referred to as “Joint monarchs”. The new monarchs were unflamboyant figures. Mary was a gentle, unassertive creature, much given to good works and well liked. William was shrewd, tough and lacking in charm. The driving force of the reign was the need to create and maintain a coalition against the vast power of France (where James II had taken refuge). “Dutch William’s wars” were unpopular in England, but since they were fought by an army under the control of Parliament, the scope for complaint was limited. William continued to reign in his own right after Mary died of smallpox in 1694. William and Mary left no children and the throne passed to Mary’s sister, Anne, a resolutely ordinary woman who was a devoted supporter of the Church of England and the Tory party. Regular party politics had begun to emerge with the formalisation of Parliamentary power in 1688. The Tories were the more monarchical group, the Whigs were inclined to emphasise the balancing role of the aristocracy. Anne had few ideas but strong loyalties. For much of her reign, she was particularly devoted to her friend Sarah Jennings. Sarah was the wife of the first Duke of Marlborough, and the Duke’s brilliant successes in the great wars with France owed much to the support he received from home until his wife fell from favour in 1710. Anne was married to Prince George of Denmark, an amiable, inconsequential man, with whom she had 17 children, all of whom died in infancy or early childhood. She was the last monarch to preside at a meeting of the Privy Council, and to refuse assent to a Parliamentary bill. 1. What kind of people were William II and his wife Mary? 2. * In your opinion, why were William Hand his wife referred to as ‘Joint monarchs ’? 3. What changes in government took place under Anne's reign?
300 The Best of Just English GEORGE III George H’s eldest son, Frederick, Prince of Wales, was unlike his father in many respects. A man of taste and intelligence, Frederick took lively pleasure in society and interest in politics. He may not have been a particularly strong character, but he appears in an attractive light, if only because of the extravagant persecution to which he was subjected by his father. ‘Poor Fred’ died in 1751, however, and the heir to the throne became his young son, George, who was aged 22 when he succeeded. George III, unlike his two predecessors, was an English King rather than a German ruler and was proud to be so. Intensely patriotic, he ‘gloried in the name of Briton* ’. Conventionally pious, he was a pattern of domestic virtue, the more strikingly in that both the preceding and the following generations of his family, in accordance with the spirit of the times, were conspicuously loose in their morals. Conscientious to a fault, he laboured hard and long at the bewildering political problems associated with the American and French Revolutions, and received little credit for his pains. Simple in his tastes, he loved farming and craftsmanship, and the company of his people. Much of this, however, was a slow growth. The young George was pathetically insecure, and found the world of politics a hard place, which offered little in the way of true friendship. The ministers whom he trusted, Bute and North, proved broken reeds. The loss of the American colonies, finalised by the Treaty of Versailles** in 1783, was a sore trial for George, who was widely, and quite unfairly, regarded responsible. By contrast, when war broke out with revolutionary France in 1793, George became the symbol of national pride, and the monarchy rose in esteem to a pitch not known since Stuart days. From middle life onwards, George suffered from bouts of illness, which affected him both mentally and physically. His condition was since diagnosed as porphyria, a genetically-caused condition. For the last ten years of his long reign, therefore, the King was tragically and irredeemably insane. 1. What were George Ill's virtues? 2. What important historic events took.place during his reign? 3. Why was George III considered a symbol of national pride? * Briton — британец, англичанин; ист. Бритт ** Versailles — [vEa'sail] — г. Версаль
101 Texts on Law 301 QUEEN VICTORIA Queen Victoria, the ruler of Britain during the greatest days of the British Empire, reigned for 63 years, which was longer than any other British monarch. Her father died when she was a baby. When she came to the throne in 1837, at the age of 18, the monarchy was very unpopular in Britain - the royal family was notorious for its disgraceful behaviour. Although she was not always popular, Victoria eventually created a new respect for the British Crown. In 1839 she married her German cousin, Prince Albert. It was a happy marriage, which produced nine children. When Albert suddenly died, Victoria was heartbroken. She wore black for the rest of her life as a sign of grief and she did not appear in public for 13 years. Some people had thought there was little point in having a monarch nobody ever saw. Everyone was happy when Queen Victoria returned to public life and her Golden and Diamond Jubilees, celebrated in 1887 and 1897, were occasions of great public delight across the entire British Empire. Victoria was an accomplished artist and a talented writer. She took a lively interest in the inventions of her time - she enjoyed traveling on the early railroads and was curious about photography. For future generations Queen Victoria has symbolized a special attitude to family values, strict public moral standards and stability. These attitudes are still known as Victorian. So the Queen gave her name to the age she lived in. 1. What kind of person was Queen Victoria? 2. Why was monarchy unpopular in Britain before Victoria became the Queen? 3. How did the public attitude to Queen Victoria change throughout her reign? 4. What were Queen Victoria‘s personal interests? 5. What does the term ‘Victorian' mean?

THE ROOTS OF AMERICAN GOVERNMENT y.---------- ------ j
304 The Best of Just English THE LOST COLONY The first successful English colony in America was Jamestown in Virginia. But the Jamestown settlers were not the first English people to try to start new life there. Twenty years earlier the adventurer Sir Walter Raleigh had sent ships to find land in the New World where English people might settle. He named the land they visited Virginia, in honor of Elizabeth, England’s unmarried Queen. In July 1585, 108 English settlers landed on Roanoke Island. They built houses and a fort, planted crops and searched — without success — for gold. But they ran out of food and made enemies of the local Amerindian inhabitants. In less than a year they gave up and sailed back to England. In 1587, the English tried again. The ships landed 118 settlers on Roanoke, including fourteen family groups. The colonists were led by an artist and mapmaker named John White, who had been a member of the 1585 expedition. Among them were White’s daughter and her husband. The couple became the parents of the first English child to be bom in America. White soon had to return to England for supplies. Three years passed before he was able to return. When his ships reached Roanoke in August 1590, he found the settlement deserted. There was no sign of what had happened to its people. Some believe that the Roanoke settlers were carried off by Spanish soldiers from Florida. Others think that they may have decided to go to live with friendly Indians on the mainland. They were never seen, or heard of, again. 1. How did Virginian the first English colony get its name? 2. Why did Sir Walter Raleigh give up the first attempt to settle in Virginia? 3. Who were among the members of the second expedition? 4. What did White find on his return to the Roanoke Island? 5. What were the theories about the fate of the Roanoke settlers?
101 Texts on Law 305 THE JAMESTOWN SETTLERS The English in North America were trying to make homes for themselves in a wilderness that was like nothing they were used to or could imagine. What’s more, there was a waste of water stretching between them and home that, in modem terms, could be compared only to the stretch of space between Moon and Earth. In addition, America had been overadvertised. The first colonists were convinced they were coming to a fruitful land in which food could be plucked from trees and in which people could relax like in Eden. An Englishman of 1607 having ‘the abundant Virginia’ in mind reminded of an American having watched too many Hollywood ‘sweetdream’ films produced before the Second World War. It’s not surprising, then, that the first colonists included many people of good birth who had no experience with manual labour and who considered it beneath them. They had not expected that such manual labour would be necessary. When it turned out that to make Jamestown succeed there had to be a good deal of sweating of the type necessary to build houses and plant crops, there was considerable disillusionment. Of course, the colonists might have avoided the labour of agriculture if they had been content to hunt and fish, but they could or would not either. For months, then, they sat around doing nothing; and, of the hundred of settlers, half were dead of hunger and disease within six months. That the rest didn’t give up and that Jamestown didn’t become just one more failure was due to one man who bore the undistinguished name of John Smith (perhaps the most important John Smith in history). 1. Why did the English find it difficult to adjust in North America? 2. What kind ofpeople were the first American settlers? 3. How did the first colony survive? 11*
306 The Best of Just English THE FIRST SETTLEMENTS The first successful English colony in America was founded at Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607. The settlement was financed by a London company, which expected to make a profit from the settlement. They believed that there was a lot of gold in the new land. Soon it turned out that their hopes were in vain. There was no gold and the young colony faced a lot of hardships. Of the first 105 colonists, 73 died of hunger and disease within seven months of their arrival. But the colony survived and eventually grew and became wealthy. The Virginians discovered a way to earn money by growing tobacco, which they began shipping to England in 1614. In New England, the northeastern region of what is now the United States, several settlements were established by English Puritans. The Puritans hoped to build an ideal community in America. The Puritans believed that governments should enforce God’s morality. In the Puritan settlements the right to vote was restricted to church members, and they strictly punished those who violated the rules. A puritan named Roger Williams disagreed with the decisions of the community and protested that the state should not interfere with religion. He set up the neighboring Rhode Island colony, which guaranteed religious freedom and the separation of church and state. This toleration, in its turn, attracted further groups of settlers to the New World. 1. Who sponsored the Virginian colony? Why? 2. What difficulties did the first English settlement in America face? 3. How did Virginians become wealthy? 4. What did the Puritans believe in?
101 Texts on Law 307 JOHN SMITH Jamestown was the first English settlement in North America, and Captain John Smith was the most able of the original Jamestown settlers. An energetic 27-year old soldier and explorer, he had already had a life full of action when he landed there in 1607. It was he who organized the first Jamestown colonists and forced them to work. If he had not done that, the infant settlement would probably have collapsed. The first colonists included many people of good birth and did not expect to work hard. When they realized that a lot of hard work was necessary to build houses and plant crops, many settlers lost hope. Of a hundred of settlers half died of hunger and disease within six months of their arrival. When food supplies ran out, Smith set off into the forests to buy com from the American Indians. On one of these expeditions he was taken prisoner. According to a story that he told later (which not everyone believed), the Indians were going to kill him when Pocahontas, the twelve-year-old daughter of the chief, saved his life. Pocahontas went on to play an important part in Virginia’s survival, bringing food to the starving settlers. Smith wrote later that the Indian princess helped to preserve the colony from death, starvation and complete destruction. Pocahontas married a tobacco planter and traveled to England with him. She died in England while waiting to board a ship to carry her back to Virginia with her son. When the son grew up he returned to Virginia. Many Virginians today claim to be descended from him and so from Pocahontas. 1. Who was John Smith? 2. What did John Smith do to help the settlers? 3. How did John Smith meet Pocahontas? 4. Who was Pocahontas? 5. Why do many Virginians today honour Pocahontas?
308 The Best of Just English POCAHONTAS An American Indian princess, Pocahontas supposedly saved the life of Captain John Smith and befriended the English colony at Jamestown. A daughter of the chief of the Powhatan tribe of Virginia, she was said to have been beautiful and intelligent. In 1608, Smith, who had helped establish the English settlement at Jamestown, was captured by the Indians and brought to Pocahontas’s village, about 24 km from Jamestown. According to Smith’s account in his General History of Virginia, he was set before an altar stone to be killed but was spared when Pocahontas threw herself over his body. Many historians have been skeptical about Smith’s story, however. Pocahontas then became the intermediary between the Englishmen and her father and reportedly persuaded the Indians to bring food to the starving colonists. In 1613, Pocahontas was seized by Captain Samuel Argali and taken to Jamestown. From the Reverend Alexander Whitaker she learned the elements of Christianity and became a convert. Pocahontas also learned the ways of the English, and in 1614, with her father’s approval, she married John Rolfe, a successful tobacco planter. The marriage initiated an eight- year period of peaceful relations between the Indians and the settlers. A boy, christened Thomas, was bom to the couple in 1615. The following year Pocahontas (now Lady Rebecca Rolfe), her family, and an Indian retinue voyaged to England. Pocahontas charmed London society and was entertained at the royal palace at Whitehall. While preparing to return to America, she was overcome by illness and died. 1. What did Pocahontas do for the colonists? 2. How did she save John Smith? 3. * Have you seen the Disney cartoon "Pocahontas ”? If you have, do you think this story coincide with the plot of the cartoon?
101 Texts on Law 309 THE CAPTAIN AND THE PRINCESS Captain John Smith was the most able of the original Jamestown settlers. An energetic 27-year-old soldier and explorer, he had already had a life full of action when he landed there in 1607. It was he who organized the first Jamestown colonists and forced them to work. If he had not done that, the infant settlement would probably have collapsed. When food supplies ran out Smith set off into the forests to buy com from the Amerindians. On one of those expeditions he was taken prisoner. According to a story that he told later (which not everyone believed), the Amerindians were going to beat his brains out when Pocahontas, the twelve- year-old daughter of the chief, Powhatan, saved his life by shielding his body with her own. Pocahontas went on to play an important part in Virginia’s survival, bringing food to the starving settlers. “She, next under God,” wrote Smith, “was the instrument to preserve the colony from death, famine and utter confusion”. In 1609 Smith was badly injured in a gunpowder explosion and was sent back to England. Five years later, in 1614, Pocahontas married the tobacco planter John Rolfe. By that time she had already learned the ways of the white people and converted to the Christian religion. In 1616 she travelled to England with him and was presented at court to King James I. The court found her amusing, and the King even ordered her portrait to be drawn. Pocahontas died of smallpox in 1617 while waiting to board a ship to carry her back to Virginia with her newborn son. When the son grew up he returned to Virginia. Many Virginians today claim to be descended from him and so from Pocahontas. 1. Who was John Smith? 2. How did Captain John Smith help the settlers? 3. What did Pocahontas do for the settlers? 4. How did Pocahontas spend the last three years of her life?
310 The Best of Just English THE INDIAN SELF-GOVERNMENT IN NORTH AMERICA Long before the United States had its first constitution, Native Americans in present-day New York State had drafted their own plan of government. In about 1570, two Native American leaders urged people in their region to make peace and join together to resist invasions from other nations. Their actions led to the formation of the Iroquois* Confederation of the Five Tribes. Indian legend, passed along from generation to generation, credits Hiawatha**, a famous Indian Chief, with giving the speech that laid the foundation for unity before the council of five Indian tribes. Following Hiawatha’s speech the leaders discussed and adopted the idea of a confederation. Although Native Americans in other parts of North America also created confederacies, the Iroquois Confederation was better organized and more effective. This was perhaps because they had a constitution — the first in the Americas. Though this constitution was not written down until 1850, its provisions included establishing peace between the numerous tribes of Indians, the preservation of life, property and liberty and honesty between their leaders. The confederate Chiefs took an oath that they would live according to the constitution of the Great Peace and exercise justice in all affairs. This constitution guided the Confederation for more than 200 years, ensuring peace for the Indian tribes but it collapsed later during the American Revolutionary War. Despite the ultimate defeat of the Confederation, the Native American concept of representative government influenced the course of early American democracy. 1. What was the main aim of the Indian Chiefs in creating the Confederation? 2. What does the Indian legend say? 3. What were the provisions of the Indian constitution? * Iroquois ['irakwoi] — ирокезы, племена североамериканских индейцев ** Hiawatha — [Тшэу/эОэ]
101 Texts on Law 311 GOVERNMENT IN THE COLONIES Between 1607 and 1733 the English founded thirteen colonies along the eastern coast of North America. It was from these colonies that the present system of American government evolved. Although they were British subjects, the first American colonists enjoyed a degree of freedom denied to most people in the world. Each English colony had its own government consisting of a governor, a legislature, and a court system. Nevertheless, the British believed that all colonists owed allegiance to the monarch. For many years the colonists agreed with this philosophy. But later they began feeling that it was difficult to be ruled by a king 3000 miles across the Atlantic Ocean. Democracy in all the colonies grew rapidly, but it did not yet exist in its current form. Women and enslaved persons could not vote, and every colony had some type of property qualification for voting. Nine of the thirteen colonies had established an official church, and many colonists remained intolerant of religious dissent. In some of the colonies, strict religious observance was expected of citizens. In Virginia, for example, the penalty for breaking the Sabbath* for the third time was death. There were also laws, which curbed idleness, improper dress and drunkenness. Despite such shortcomings, the colonial governments established practices that became a key part of the nation’s system of government. Chief among these were a written constitution that guaranteed basic liberties and limited the power of government, a legislature of elected representatives, and the separation of powers between the governor (the chief executive) and the legislature. Today the United States government embodies each of these practices. 1. Why did the people of the first American colonists enjoy more freedoms than the people in Europe? 2. What elements did the first governments consist of? 3. What were the basic principles of the colonial system of government? Sabbath ['saeboS] —рел. священный день отдохновения
312 The Best of Just English COLONIAL SELF-GOVERNMENT A key feature of the colonial period in North America was government according to some type of written plan. The Mayflower Compact that the Pilgrims signed in 1620 stands as the first example of many colonial plans for self-government. Forty-one men, representing all the Pilgrim families, drew up The Mayflower Compact in the tiny cabin of their ship, the Mayflower, which brought them to the New World. The Pilgrim leaders realized they needed rules to govern themselves if they were to survive in the new land. Through The Mayflower Compact, they agreed to choose their own leaders and to make their own laws, which they would design for their own benefit. Beginning in 1629 the Massachusetts Bay Colony, settled by Puritans, added many towns to the original Plymouth settlement. In 1636, the colony realized a need for more comprehensive laws. It adopted the “Great Fundamentals”*, the first basic system of laws in the English Colonies. In 1639 Puritans who had left the Massachusetts Bay Colony to colonize Connecticut drew up America’s first formal constitution, or charter, called the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut. This document laid out a plan for government that gave the people the right to elect the governor, judges, and representatives to make laws. While it was based on the Massachusetts model, it did not restrict voting rights to church members. Soon after, other English colonies began drawing up their own charters. These documents established a system of limited government and rule by law in each of the colonies. Several of these colonial consti- tutions were very democratic for their time. The Rhode Island and Connecticut charters were so democratic that they continued to serve as state constitutions even after the adoption of the United States Constitution. /. Why did the first American colonists need the system of self-government? 2. What were the basic principles of these early documents? 3. What rights did the first colonists get under these documents? * The Great Fundamentals — Великие Основы
101 Texts on Law 313 COLONIAL LEGISLATURES The present system of American government evolved from the first thirteen colonies founded along the eastern coast of North America between 1607 and 1733. Representative assemblies became firmly established in the colonies. The Virginia House of Burgesses, the first representative legislature in America, was established in 1619, only 12 years after the settlement of Jamestown. The newly elected lawmakers passed laws aiding farmers and curbing idleness, improper dress, and drunkenness. It was not long before other colonies set up their own legislatures. By the mid-1700s, some colonial legislatures had been operating for more than 100 years. As a result, representative government was an established tradition in America well before the colonists declared their independence from Great Britain in 1776. The colonial legislatures dominated colonial government. The rapidly growing colonies constantly needed new laws to cope with new circumstances. For example, they had to control the distribution of land and construct public buildings and facilities such as roads, ferries, and wharves. The colonies also had to establish schools and new towns and set up civil and criminal courts. These legislatures were examples of the consent of the governed because a large number of qualified people voted. Although there were property qualifications for voting, land was abundant and most colonists could afford property. Colonial charters divided powers of government. The governor, as the agent of the monarch, carried out the monarch’s orders. The governor also enforced the laws that the colonial legislature passed. This separation of powers continued under the United States Constitution, which allows Congress to pass laws and gives the President the power to enforce them. /. What spheres of life did the first colonial laws regulate? 2. Why were these laws necessary? 3. How were the powers of government divided?
314 The Best of Just English BRITISH HERITAGE AND AMERICAN COLONIES American political system is deeply rooted in the principles developed in the course of British political history. In 1689 the English Parliament, which had originated in the 1200s, passed the English Bill of Rights. This document, a landmark in the development of democratic government, was very important to the American colonists. The English Bill of Rights set clear limits on what the ruler could and could not do. It applied to the American colonists — who were English subjects — as well as to the people in England. Incorporating elements from the Magna Carta, the key ideas of the English Bill of Rights included the following ideas. Monarchs do not have a divine right to rule, they rule with the consent of the people’s representatives in Parliament. The monarch must have Parliament’s consent to suspend laws, levy taxes, or maintain an army. The monarch cannot interfere with parliamentary elections and debates. The people have a right to petition the government and to have a fair and speedy trial by a jury of their peers. The people should not be subject to cruel and unusual punishments or to excessive fines and bail. The English colonists in North America shared a belief in these rights with the people of England. A major cause of the American Revolution was that the colonists felt they were being deprived of these basic rights. The colonists had a firm belief in representative government, in which people elect delegates to make laws and conduct government. The colonists had also experienced representative government. Parliament was a representative assembly with the power to enact laws. In America legislatures grew directly out of this English practice of having Parliament pass laws. /. What is the connection between American and British political systems? 2. Which principles of the British government influenced the American early development? 3. What are the benefits of the representative government?
101 Texts on Law 315 THE MAGNA CARTA AND ITS AMERICAN LEGACY King John of England agreed, in 1215, to the demands of his barons and authorized that handwritten copies of the Magna Carta be prepared on parchment, affixed with his seal, and publicly read throughout the realm. Thus he bound not only himself but his “heirs, for ever” to grant “to all freemen of our kingdom” the rights and liberties the great charter described. With the Magna Carta, King John placed himself and England’s future sovereigns and magistrates within the rule of law. When Englishmen left their homeland to establish colonies in the New World, they brought with them charters guaranteeing that they and their heirs would “have and enjoy all liberties and immunities of free and natural subjects.” Scant generations later, when these American colonists raised arms against their mother country, they were fighting not for new freedoms but to preserve liberties that dated back to the 13th century. When representatives of the young republic of the United States gathered to draft a constitution, they turned to the legal system they knew and admired —English common law as evolved from the Magna Carta. The American Constitution is “the Supreme Law of the Land,” just as the rights granted by the Magna Carta were not to be arbitrarily canceled by subsequent English laws. This heritage is most clearly apparent in the American Bill of Rights. The Fifth Amendment to the US Constitution guarantees: “No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law”. The Sixth Amendment states that “.. .the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury”. In 1957 the American Bar Association* acknowledged the debt American law and constitutionalism had to the Magna Carta and English common law by erecting a monument in England at the place where the document was signed. 1. How did the signing of the Magna Carta influence the people of England? 2. What were the colonists fighting for when they raised arms against their mother country? 3. Why did the American Bar Association erect the monument in England? Bar Association — ассоциация адвокатов (имеющих право выступать в суде)
316 The Best of Just English THE ROOTS OF AMERICAN GOVERNMENT Every year thousands of foreign and American tourists flock to Virginia to visit the remains of Jamestown, the first permanent English settlement in North America. Crumbling foundation stones and the ruins of the old church tower mark the site of the original Jamestown, founded in 1607. The decaying brick and mortar offer a striking contrast to the enduring principles of self-government inherited from the English colonists. This legacy of self-government enables Americans today to voice their opinions without fear of reprisal, to choose their leaders, and to take an active role in shaping the nation and communities in which they live. Modem Americans, like the colonists, believe that there are natural rights — life, liberty, and property—that governments are contracted to protect. They state in the first ten Constitutional Amendments, known together as the Bill of Rights, what they consider to be the fundamental rights of any American. Among these rights are the freedom of religion, speech, and the press, the right of peaceful assembly, and the right to petition the government to correct wrongs. Other rights guard the citizens against unreasonable searches, arrests, and seizures of property, and establish a system of justice guaranteeing orderly legal procedures. These include the right of trial by jury, that is, being judged by one’s fellow citizens. The great pride Americans have in their Constitution, their almost religious respect for it comes from the knowledge that these ideals, freedoms, and rights were not given to them by a small ruling class. Rather, they are seen as the natural “unalienable” rights of every American, which had been fought for and won. They cannot be taken away by any government, court, official, or law. 1. Why are crowds of tourists attracted to Jamestown? 2. What provisions does the Bill of Rights contain? 3. Why are Americans so proud of their Constitution?
101 Texts on Law 317 BOSTON TEA PARTY By the middle of the 18th century the thirteen colonies that made up part of England’s empire in the New World were finding it difficult to be ruled by a king 3000 miles across the Atlantic Ocean. They were tired of taxes imposed on them. But independence was a gradual and painful process. The colonists couldn’t forget that they were British citizens, and that they owed allegiance to King George III. A tea party and a “massacre” were the two events that hurried the destiny of Americans. Along with the general unrest these events united the colonists. In 1770 a tea company in India, owned by England was loosing money. To save the company, England levied a tax on tea sold in colonies. Boston citizens did not permit the unloading of the British ships that arrived in Boston in 1773 with 342 chests of tea. The royal governor of Massachusetts, Thomas Hutchinson, however, would not let the tea ships return to England until the duty had been paid. On the evening of December 16, a group of Bostonians, instigated by the American patriot Samuel Adams, disguised as Native Americans, boarded the vessels and dumped a cargo of India Tea Company into the Boston Harbour. Although he kept to British tea tradition, King George didn’t like the colonists’ way of “making tea”. In 1773, also in the Boston Harbour, British soldiers were jeered and stoned by colonists who thought that the soldiers had been sent to watch them. The soldiers fired into the crowd and killed a few citizens. The colonists exaggerated the number of the killed and called it “a massacre”. I. What were the relations between England and the American colonies in the middle of the 18th century? 2. Why were the events of 1773 in Boston called "a tea party"? 3. What political events did the "tea party" and the "massacre” lead to?
318 The Best of Just English THE STORY OF A BELL In Independence Hall in Philadelphia, the site of signing of the Declaration of Independence, reposes one of the most cherished monuments of American history, the Liberty Bell, which proclaimed the birth of this nation on July 8, 1776. The magnificent old veteran is 12 feet in circumference at the lip and weighs over a ton. The inscription on it calls to proclaim liberty throughout the land for all its inhabitants. But although it is as intimately associated with American independence as the Declaration of Independence, the Liberty Bell, like many Americans, is an immigrant, and it was not always known by its present name. It was originally known as the Old Statehouse Bell or the Province Bell. Back in 1751 civic leaders in Philadelphia decided to add a bell tower and a fine bell to the Statehouse. So they ordered a bronze bell from a famous bell foundry in London. Part of the order read: “Let the bell be cast and examined carefully before it is shipped.” In 1752 the new bell arrived safely from England, but at the first blow of a hammer to test it, it cracked. Not wanting to delay by returning the bell to England, the officials ordered the bell founders in Philadelphia to remedy the fault. Two times it was recast before it was finally ready. On July 8,1776, the bell rang to mark the adoption of the Declaration of Independence. On April 16,1783, it proudly announced the proclamation of peace and the newly won independence of the United States of America. /. What is the Liberty Bell associated with for the Americans? 2. What happened to the Bell on its arrival to the United States? 3. What was the main mission of the Bell?
101 Texts on Law 319 THE LIBERTY BELL One of the most cherished monuments of American history, the Liberty Bell, proclaimed the birth of the new nation on July 8, 1776, marking the adoption of the Declaration of Independence. On July 4, 1826, the bell was nearly three quarters of a century old, and the nation whose birth it had helped to announce was now a lusty youngster of 50. Joyous indeed was the bell’s sound on that occasion. Then, on July 8, 1835, while tolling for the funeral procession of John Marshall, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, the great bell cracked. Fearing that the crack would eventually destroy the historic bell, officials ordered it taken down from the tower. It was after this that the Liberty Bell received its name. Since then, the bell has been on display but has never rung. In fact, no one living knows the voice of the Liberty Bell, for it has never spoken since 1835. The crack, which appeared on that occasion is prevented from widening by a mechanical device, called a spider, installed inside the bell. At the end of the 20th century the bell foundry in London that originally cast the great bell made a friendly proposal — to ship the bell back to England, melt it, and recast it at no cost to the United States. The keepers of the bell considered the offer very seriously before giving an answer. Then they decided. The cracked Liberty Bell is a cherished symbol of America’s struggle for freedom. Just as a man’s facial lines are a visible sign of the strain and stress he has survived, so the crack in the Liberty Bell serves to remind Americans that their forefathers did not win liberty for their country and its people without strain and stress. Therefore, on behalf of the American people, the officials thanked the London foundry for its generous offer but refused it. /. How did the bell mark the birth of a new nation? 2. Why was the bell taken down from the bell tower? 3. Why did Americans decide to reject the offer of the British foundry?
320 The Best of Just English THE IDEAS OF JOHN LOCKE* The ideas and writings of the seventeenth-century English philosopher John Locke deeply influenced the political outlook of the American colonists. Locke spelled out his political ideas in two treatises on government, first published in 1690. His writings were widely read and discussed in both Europe and America. Locke’s ideas seemed to fit the American colonial experience. Colonial leaders such as Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison regarded these ideas as political truth. Locke’s ideas became so influential that they have been called the “textbook of the American Revolution.” Locke reasoned that all people were bom free, equal, and independent. They possessed natural rights to life, liberty, and property at the time when they lived in a state of nature, before governments were formed. People contracted among themselves to form governments to protect their natural rights. Locke argued that if a government failed to protect these natural rights, the people could change that government. The people had not agreed to be governed by tyrants who threatened their rights but by rulers who defended their rights. Locke’s ideas were revolutionary in an age when monarchs still claimed they had God-given absolute powers. Locke denied that people were bom with an obligation to obey their rulers. Rather, in his Second Treatise on Civil Government, Locke insisted that freedom of people under government is to have a standing rule to live by, common to everyone of that society, and made by the legislative power vested in it. Government, then, was legitimate only as long as people continued to consent to it. Both the US Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, written nearly a century after Locke, reflected Locke’s revolu- tionary ideas. 1. Why were Locke’s ideas called the “textbook of the American Revolution ”? 2. Sum up Locke's ideas on government. 3. Why were Locke's ideas revolutionary for times? John Locke [bk] —Джон Лок
101 Texts on Law 321 GEORGE WASHINGTON The first president of the United States, George Washington has been called “the father of his country.” Son of a wealthy Virginia plantation owner, Washington inherited several profitable estates. During the War of Independence, which was fought against Britain, Washington showed himself as a prominent officer in the Continental armed forces. Then he got married and settled down to the comfortable life of a country gentleman. In 1774 he took part in the Continental Congress, which organized the confrontation between the American colonies and their British rulers. Chosen to lead the American Continental Army, Washington commanded it throughout the entire War of Independence. After the defeat of the British, Washington retired to private life on his plantation, declaring his wish to live and die an honest man on his own farm. Despite being a national hero, he did not want public office, but he was persuaded to return to political duties. He presided over the drafting of the United States Constitution, and in 1789 he was unanimously elected the first president of the United States. Reluctantly, he accepted the office. Washington served for two terms as president and would certainly have been elected again had he not refused to run for a third term. By the time of his death, Washington was universally admired for his honesty, dignity, and patriotism. After his death, he was described as being “first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen.” I. Who was George Washington? 2. Why is George Washington called "the father of his country"? 3. What major events in the history of the United States did he take part in? 4. What sort of life did George Washington want for himself? 5. Why is he described as "first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen ’’?
322 The Best of Just English THOMAS JEFFERSON Thomas Jefferson was perhaps the greatest man of the time of American Revolution. He was not only a prominent statesman and the third man to become President of the United States. He was a man who wanted to explore every branch of knowledge. Of all his many achievements there were three by which he wished to be remembered by the future generations: “Author of the Declaration of American Independence, of the Law of Virginia for Religious Freedom and Father of the University of Virginia.” The University of Virginia provides the real proof of Jefferson’s talents as an architect. There are few buildings in America that produce such immediate and unforgettable impression. Jefferson had begun thinking of founding a University during his Presidency. From the very beginning he had planned it in an entirely different way from existing universities on either side of the Atlantic — as an academic village. In his enthusiasm Jefferson began work before the state legislature gave official permission or financial support. The first stone of the building was laid in October 1817. The next year the project received 15,000 dollars from the state officials. They supported the idea of founding a state university. Jefferson was appointed a chairman of a commission, which had to select a place and draw up plans for the design and organization of the University. 1. Who was Thomas Jefferson? 2. What were the three things he wanted to be remembered for? 3. What made the University of Virginia different from the existing universities? 4. When did Jefferson first think offounding a university? 5. How was the university built?
101 Texts on Law 323 BENJAMIN FRANKLIN Benjamin Franklin was a great statesman and politician at the time of the American Revolution. He played a leading role in the conflicts of his time in defense of liberty and human rights. Besides, he was an outstanding man of science, too. Franklin had many qualities of an inventor. They included great curiosity, broad interest, mechanical skills, the ability to continue with the task until completed, and a practical view of life. But even more than these, he also believed that science could be used for the benefit of the whole community. Today his philosophy of serving others through science and invention still influences the history of science in the USA. At the age of twenty-one, for example, while living in Philadelphia, Franklin formed a club. It was a discussion group, which met each week. At the meetings each member presented a question of science, politics, literature, or philosophy, which was discussed by the entire group. Franklin also liked practical experiments. His experiments in the field of electricity, for instance, were perhaps the most famous. He studied the heat of the sun and concluded that people should not wear dark colours in hot weather. People soon followed his advice to wear white clothes in a hot, sunny climate. In the years that followed, Franklin continued an active life. He always had faith in the steady progress of science. Franklin sometimes regretted being bom too soon. He felt sorry he would miss the inventions of the future. 1. Who was Benjamin Franklin? 2. What qualities of an inventor did Benjamin Franklin possess? 3. What sort of club did Benjamin Franklin form in his youth? 4. What practical experiments did he make? 5. Why did Benjamin Franklin regret being born at his time?
324 The Best of Just English PATRICK HENRY Patrick Henry was bom in May 29, 1736. Have you ever heard someone speak so passionately that the speech moved you to do something? Even as a young man, Patrick Henry had that kind of influence in the American Colonies. A natural leader and a brilliant speaker, he believed in individual rights and independence from the British government. As a young lawyer, he astonished his courtroom audience in 1763 with an eloquent defense based on the idea of natural rights, the political theory that humans are bom with certain inalienable (incapable of being surrendered) rights. The idea of natural rights is central to the Declaration of Independence: “We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.” It was in St. John’s Church in Richmond, Virginia, that Patrick Henry delivered his most famous speech. With war against Great Britain looming, Henry proclaimed, “I know not what course others may take, but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!” As the first governor of Virginia and as a state legislator, Henry continued to have profound influence on the development of the new nation. He worked for the addition of the first ten amendments to the Constitution. Known as the Bill of Rights, they guarantee certain freedoms, such as the freedom of speech and religion. 1. What talents did Patrick Henry possess? 2. What were his beliefs? 3. What unalienable rights should American citizens enjoy under the Declaration of Independence?
101 Texts on Law 325 ABRAHAM LINCOLN The sixteenth president of the United States, Abraham Lincoln led the northern states to victory in the American Civil War. The son of a poor frontiersman, Lincoln spent most of his childhood in a rough cabin in the Indiana woods. He had little schooling, and was mostly self-taught, but by the age of 30 he had become a successful lawyer. Lincoln first attracted attention on a national scale when he ran for the Senate in 1858 as a candidate for the new Republican Party. During a public debate about slavery, he stated that government couldn’t remain half slave and half free. In 1860 — only two years later — he was elected president. Because of his antislavery views, Lincoln was extremely unpopular in the Southern states, and after his election South Carolina became the first state to withdraw from the Union. Shortly after his inauguration in 1861, the American Civil War broke out between the Confederate States, where slavery flourished, and the Union states, which were opposed to slavery. After four years of bitter conflict Abraham Lincoln led the Union to victory. On April 14, 1865, he was shot dead by John Booth, a southern fanatic, while he was attending a theater performance in Washington, D.C. Abraham Lincoln is especially remembered for his words describing democracy as “government of the people, by the people, for the people.” 1. How did Abraham Lincoln spend his youth? 2. What were Lincoln's ideas about slavery? 3. Why was Lincoln unpopular in the southern states? 4. What were the main conflicts of the Civil War? 5. What are the most well-known Lincoln's words?

THE ROOTS OF RUSSIAN LAW
328 The Best of Just English KIEVAN RUS The importance of legal materials for an understanding of early Russian history may be simply stated: virtually all of the few surviving documents from the Kievan period are legal texts of one kind or another. The earliest are in fact international legal documents, three peace treaties concluded in the first half of the tenth century between the Kievan Prince and the Byzantium, which offer insight into penal practices, the status of foreigners, the law of shipwreck, and the ratification of treaties. With the conversion of Kievan Rus to Christianity (988A.D.), a channel was created for the reception of canon law and, perhaps, the means for reducing to written form the enactments of the princes and customary rules applied. There is a strong supposition that the Slavic peoples inhabiting the lands of what became Kievan Rus had fashioned definite rules for inter- personal and interclan or intertribal behaviour long before the Kievan princes consolidated their authority. Whether the earliest surviving compilations of Russian laws represented a creative codification of law or a reduction to writing of customary law continues to be debated. So does the extent to which the substance of the early document, which contains striking parallels with aspects Anglo-Saxon law, was the result of mutual influence or of the independent development of peoples at a similar stage of societal development. The surviving redactions pose internal obstacles to understanding as well. Their obsolete terminology and grammar have given rise to interminable debates about the true meanings of terms. Most of the texts available for study were copied centuries after the original was allegedly composed. 1. What are the earliest legal texts of Kievan Rus? 2. What changes did the conversion of Kievan Rus to Christianity bring? 3. What difficulties do scientists face dealing with the surviving redactions of the early Russian legal documents?
101 Texts on Law 329 EARLY RUSSIAN LAW AND MONGOL SUBJUGATION In the mid-thirteenth century there thundered across the Eurasian steppes the most powerful armed adversary Europe had ever confronted. For nearly two and one-half centuries the Golden Horde exacted tribute from Russian cities. Kievan Rus, which in its prime had flourished as a centre of civilisation with familial and commercial links ranging from England and Scandinavia in the North, to Spain and France in the West, Byzantium, Persia, and India southward, and China to the East, was devastated by the Mongol advance. The Mongol subjugation of Russia is regarded as the principal reason for Russia’s failure to keep up with the pace of legal development in Western Europe. Had Kiev survived, in the course of time universities might have opened, law might have been systematically taught, commentaries compiled, a legal profession formed, and the Russian legal system might have come to resemble others of the Romanist tradition more closely. The Mongols were not a sedentary people. It was not their pattern to conquer and then permanently occupy territory. Rather, they preferred to introduce a tributary structure, often relying upon local Russians who appeared to be loyal, and to extract horrible retribution when the tributary obligations were not observed. So far as the legal system was concerned, the Mongols were content that it should operate quite normally; but they imposed a style of autocracy and public administration which many observers believe left an indelible imprint on subsequent Russian styles of state leadership. It should be added that the Mongols did not in principle oppose commercial or other interaction between Russian cities or principalities and Western Europe. Why then could not have law in Russia continued to develop under European stimulus? There is no persuasive answer, but it may not be amiss to suggest that something other than the Mongol presence needs to be taken into account. 1. What was the political situation in Russia in the mid-thirteenth century? 2. How did this situation affect the legal development of Russia? 3. What was the Mongols' style of leadership in Russia?
330 The Best of Just English EARLY RUSSIAN LAW Factional rivalries within the Mongol Empire led in due course to its decline and destruction. In Central and Western Russia the Grand Prince of Muscovy* gradually asserted his authority over neighbouring princes and fashioned a centralized state which ultimately threw off the surviving remnants of Tatar bondage and then militarily eliminated serious threats to Muscovite lands from that direction. As the Grand Prince’s authority extended over newly acquired provinces, charters were issued to confirm the relationship to Muscovy or to grant special privileges to certain communities. The most important surviving text of this nature is the White Lake Charter of 1488, which defined inter alia** the powers of the Grand Prince’s judges and laid down judicial procedures and penalties. The Charter was followed nine years later by what has been called the first national Russian Law Code of 1497. This and the other documents of 1550 are the two major legal monuments of the period under consideration. Both law codes concerned themselves primarily with the technicalities of judicial procedure. The extent to which they created new rules of procedure or reflected pre-existing patterns is much debated; the evidence of judgment charters prior to 1497 would seem to indicate the transition to a vertical system of justice with a hierarchy of courts and judges. The Grand Prince had the right to act as judge in first instance or as final appellate instance in all cases, if he chose. The right to the personal justice of the ruler was an esteemed privilege in Muscovy. 1. How did the Grand Princes of Muscovy gain and use their power? 2. What were the reasons for issuing Charters in Muscovy? 3. What powers did the Grand Prince have in trying cases? * Muscovy ['mAskavi] — Московское Государство, Московия ** inter alia (lat) [intar7eilia] — среди прочего
101 Texts on Law 331 LITIGATION IN MUSCOVY Litigation in Muscovy seems to have been open to anyone, from princes to slaves, women, children, clergy, and bondsmen. Representation and substitution were allowed at trial, even among witnesses and on appeal. Witness testimony was the form of evidence most frequently used; documentary evidence was less common. Witnesses unable to appear are known to have sent depositions containing their testimony. Forgeries were not unknown, and especially in land cases the court would personally verify or authenticate the documentary evidence. Divine justice also might be invoked. An icon or piece of turf might be carried during boundary inspections and the appropriate oath taken. Kissing the cross also appears as a means of confirming evidence or independent means of proof. A judicial duel might be invoked, usually by one of the parties but sometimes by initiative of the judge. Yet another method of divine justice was the casting of lots. Foreign visitors to Muscovy have left descriptions of judicial duel and accounts of their own involvement in trials resolved by casting lots. In many cases the Muscovite judge merely prepared a trial record* of the proceedings and submitted this to a higher instance, which read the record and then questioned both parties to the dispute. The higher instance would then come to a decision and instruct the inferior judge accordingly. On the whole, the Muscovite lawsuits of this period have impressed scholars as an adversary type proceeding in which the two parties had primary responsibility for initiating the case, presenting the evidence, and adducing the arguments. The courts rarely summoned witnesses; judges seemed to have refereed the proceedings by ensuring that each party had full opportunity to present its case. Litigants did not employ professional counsel. We have no evidence of a nascent legal profession. The judge did ask questions, but mainly to ensure all evidence was presented. Cross- examination or interrogation evidently was not practised. 1. What did witnesses do in Muscovy when they couldn’t appear at trial? 2. How was divine justice applied? 3. How was the legal procedure performed? * trial record — зд. доклад
332 The Best of Just English PRINCELY JUSTICE IN MUSCOVY The Grand Prince had the right to act as judge in first instance or as final appellate instance in all cases, if he chose. The right to the personal justice of the ruler was an esteemed privilege in Muscovy. Certain categories of the populace — the clergy, servitors and peasants of priests and monasteries, some categories of peasants, guild merchants, foreigners present in Muscovy as merchants or military personnel, among others — were exempted from the ordinary courts and were dealt with by departments* more responsive to the central authority. The majority of cases, however, came to be heard by regional vice- regents endowed with judicial powers in certain types of cases. Notwithstanding the usual judicial channels, subjects retained the right of direct petition to the Grand Prince to redress wrongs, which ultimately led to the creation of a department specially charged to handle these. The first national Russian Law Codes would appear to reflect a realization that the personal dispensation of justice by the Sovereign had become too complex; accordingly, a hierarchy of agents came to perform these functions. But the judgment charters contain no conclusive evidence of a fixed judicial hierarchy; on the contrary, some court officials appeared to have different degrees of authority and sat on the same case on appeal two or more times. Litigation in Muscovy seems to have been open to anyone, from princes to slaves, women, children, clergy, and bondsmen. 7. What judicial powers did the Grand Prince have? 2. What judicial institutions dealt with the clergy and the foreigners? 3. Was there a fixed judicial hierarchy in Muscovy? departments — зд. “приказы”
101 Texts on Law 333 EARLY RUSSIAN JUDICIAL PRACTICE Ivan the Terrible destroyed the power of the hereditary nobility and abolished the right to pass in service from one lord to another without loss of patrimonial property. The nobility became bound to the Tsar by service, and in turn the peasants were bound to their landlords, gradually being prohibited from leaving their estates and likewise becoming indirectly the servitors of the Tsar. Toward the end of the sixteenth century other progress was to be noted. Trial by ordeal became uncommon, and trial by combat was formally abolished in 1556. But in criminal proceedings investigation of allegations was by torture, a practice, which endured well into the eighteenth century. Evidence and proofs collected in this manner were then sent to Moscow, where they were reviewed and, if the party was deemed guilty, punishment assigned. From Byzantium, Muscovy had received Christianity via Kievan Rus, and with the fall of Constantinople in 1453 and the marriage of the Tsar to Sophia, the niece and heiress of the last of the Byzantine Emperors, Muscovy assumed the mantle of the ‘Third Rome’. The Mongol tradition of tolerance for religious faiths was supplanted in Russia by intolerance for the non-Orthodox. But the Tsar’s dual role as head of State and Church contributed, many believe, to an attenuation of some of the harsher features of the Mongol autocratic tradition being adapted by the Muscovite rulers. 1. What legal developments marked the second half of the 16th century? 2. What changes did the conversion of Rus to Christianity bring? 3. How did the Mongols treat Christianity?
334 The Best of Just English LAW REFORM IN RUSSIA Peter’s modernization of the Russian state and elimination of the patriarchalism as an alternative repository of power had implications mostly for Russian administrative law, and indeed it was here that Peter’s chief claim to law reform lay. He acknowledged the need for continued systematization of Russian legislation and appointed no less than three commissions between 1700—1720 to attend to the matter. None progressed very far. It was Peter’s reforms of the state apparatus and military law that gave him claim to the title of law reformer. The Russian government was reorganised with close account being taken of Swedish and German practice. Recent archival research has disclosed that Peter sought and obtained data on both the law and practice of Swedish institutions even during the Northern War and modelled his collegial reform of 1718 on the Swedish practice. Foreigners were extensively recruited to operate the system until Peter could produce sufficient Russian trained personnel. In 1722 Peter established the Procuracy, perhaps also adapting Swedish institutions, to act as the ‘eye of the Tsar’ and watch over the conformity to law of actions of local officials and bodies. Military and naval law were fundamentally reformed by the enactment of a Military Statute (1716) and a Naval Statute (1721), both drawing upon European models, including German, French, Swedish, Dutch, and English, remaining in effect with minor modifications for more than a century, and extending to certain civilian matters. These were natural areas of concentration for the ruler intent on modernization and at war constantly during his reign. Had he lived longer, one may only speculate what other changes might have been brought in law. 7. What was Peter the Great’s contribution into the Russian law? 2. How did Peter take advantage of the foreign experience? 3. What reforms gave Peter the title of law reformer?
101 Texts on Law 335 PETER THE GREAT A powerful Russian ruler, Peter the Great, expanded and modernized his country. He was only nine when he became the Tsar of Russia. Eager to bring progress to his nation, he travelled around Western Europe under an assumed name. His journey resulted in a number of important reforms in Russia. He crushed the power of the old nobility and imported foreign experts and craftsmen to bring Western skills to Russia. He also transformed the country’s administration. When he came to power, there were about eighty government departments. He replaced these with only nine. Peter the Great modernized the army and the navy. Troops were equipped with Russian guns and uniforms, and, for the first time, the soldiers were properly trained. Peter created a powerful navy by building battleships. He forced his subjects to adopt Western dress and shave off their beards, which were considered to be a symbol of the old days. Peter the Great was good with his hands and a master of crafts such as carpentry. He even pulled teeth. But Peter was a tough ruler. Thousands of workers died building his magnificent new capital city, St.Petersburg. Constantly at war, he made Russia far stronger than it had been before. Though Peter was a harsh ruler, he was extremely brave - he died after diving into a river in winter to rescue some drowning sailors. 1. Who was Peter the Great? 2. What did Peter the Great do to bring progress to his nation? 3. How did Peter modernize the army and the navy? 4. What were Peter's reforms in the country’s administration? 12 — 9099
336 The Best of Just English RUSSIAN LAW IN THE 18th CENTURY Peter the Great of Russia deserves to be classified as a great legislator: he personally drafted or revised many of his enactments; it was he personally who instructed that foreign laws and legal experience be assembled and it was he who read or specially translated these materials for his own edification. Whatever reception of foreign law may have occurred at earlier stages of Russian history, Russia itself had never before reached so insistently and assertively for foreign legal experience. Peter’s immediate successors did not pursue his pace of reform; however, within less than four decades a foreigner came to the Russian throne whose enlightened attitude toward law and law reform rapidly earned her the title ‘the Great’. Catherine II set about immediately to bring Russia up to the standard of eighteenth-century Europe. Peter I had taken the measures required to found the Academy of Sciences in Russia, which opened shortly after his death in 1725. Law was among the sciences to be pursued, and the Academy of Sciences was to serve simultaneously as a research and a teaching institution, an Academy and a university. The first appointee in law, Beckenstein from Germany, offered lectures on natural law and politics. His successor appointed in 1738 was F.H. Strube de Piermont (1704—1790), who published at St. Petersburg in 1740 a major study on the origins of natural law, in the French language. In 1756 Strube delivered lectures treating the origins of Russian law that were published in both Russian and Latin. Three chairs of law were initially established within the Law Faculty of Moscow University founded in 1755. Gradually, the number of law students increased. The University professors introduced the practice of teaching Russian law through mock trials and actual proceedings. 1. Why is Peter the Great considered to be a great legislator? 2. How did Peter the Great take advantage of the foreign legal experience? 3. How did the foundation of educational institutions in Russia affect its legal development?
101 Texts on Law 337 RUSSIAN LAW IN THE 19th CENTURY Russia embarked upon the nineteenth century with a new Emperor in a liberal frame of mind determined to modernize the state apparatus and bring order to the chaotic state of Russian legislation. In 1801 the tenth codification commission since Peter I was instituted. The Commission looked initially to Europe for ideas. The works of Jeremy Bentham were translated into Russian and the Code Napoleon was closely followed in preparing the initial drafts. But imposing foreign schemes for systematization did not find favour with Alexander I in the end; codification work fell into desuetude, to be revived later in the 1820s. Russia would look to her own historical experience and legislation to fashion a new code of law. Alexander I also introduced a ministerial reform to supplant the collegial model of Peter the Great. Modelled upon the French scheme, the administrative reform was accompanied by an expansion of the education system and a transition to a system of civil service recruitment based on examination performance rather than exclusively hereditary links. ‘Jurisprudence’ was among the subjects examined; it encompassed natural law, Roman law, private law, criminal law, and the State economy. New universities were founded and faculties of law formed. Foreign law professors had to be recruited in the early decades, but preference was given to Russian candidates and in the course of time Russian graduates came to fill the majority of posts. Moscow University continued to offer legal training in both the general law subjects and in the procedures and arts of advocacy in Russian tribunals. 1. What were the major advances in the work of the 1801 codification commission? 2. What reforms made by Alexander I supplanted the collegial model of Peter the Great? 3. What are the major features of the Russian legal development of this period? 12*
338 The Best of Just English THE PRE-REVOLUTIONARY HERITAGE Russian law and the Russian legal system are comprehensible only against the background of their past: what was rejected, what was transformed, what has endured. The 1917 October Revolution proclaimed in the exuberance of its triumph a complete break with the past, and in 1918 there followed a formal repeal of Imperial legislation. But law is not merely the statute book at any given moment of time; it represents an accumulation of historical experiences, values, terminology, attitudes constructed in the course of human affairs over many centuries. These are the elements, which can not be wholly dispensed with by any functioning society irrespective of how drastic a revolution it may undergo. Reconstructing the pre-revolutionary legal heritage in the Soviet Union was no easy task. Records for the early period are exceptionally sparse, and for latter centuries, hardly touched by legal historians. Moreover, within the frontiers of the Russian Empire there were dozens of legal systems operating simultaneously: customary law of various tribes and peoples, Islamic law, Baltic law, canon law, Georgian, Armenian, Azerbaidzhani, Judaic, and others side by side with Russian law enacted by the central authorities. But for a deeper understanding historical con- text is of the utmost significance, nor should one lose sight of the fact that all eras of Russian experience relate to the larger Western and Eastern legal traditions. The development of Russian law itself was affected by foreign law: Byzantine, Roman, Tatar, Polish, Swedish, German, French, English, Italian. 1. What difficulties do scholars face examining Russian law? 2. Why was it difficult to reconstruct pre-revolutionary legal system in the Soviet Union? 3. What legal systems influenced Russian law in the course of its development? *Do you know how this influence was performed?
THE BRITISH GOVERNMENT OF TODAY
340 The Best of Just English THE GOVERNMENTAL MODEL IN THE UK The governmental model that operates in Britain today is usually described as constitutional monarchy, or parliamentary system. While a monarch still has a role to play on some executive and legislative levels, it is Parliament, which possesses the essential power, and the government of the day, which governs by initiating and controlling political policy and legislation. The correct constitutional definition of Parliament is “Queen- in-Parliamenf’, and all state and governmental business is therefore carried out in the name of the monarch by the politicians and officials of the system. In constitutional theory the British people hold the political sovereignty to choose their government, while Parliament, consisting partly of their elected representatives in the Commons, possesses the legal sovereignty to make laws. The various branches of this political system, although easily distinguishable from each other, are not entirely separate. The monarch is formally head of the executive, the legislature and the judiciary. The legislature, which consists of both Houses of Parliament and formally the monarch, is for most purposes the supreme law-making body. The executive comprises the sitting government and its Cabinet, together with government ministers of departments headed by ministers or secretaries of state, who all act formally in the name of the monarch. The judiciary is composed mainly of the judges of the higher courts, who determine the common law and interpret Acts of Parliament. The judiciary is supposed to be independent of the legislative and executive branches of government. 1. What role does the Sovereign play in constitutional monarchy? 2. Why are the branches of the British political system not entirely separate? 3. What are the functions of the three branches ofpower?
101 Texts on Law 341 THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT In theory, the constitution has three branches: Parliament, which makes laws, the government, which ‘executes’ laws, i.e. puts them into effect, and the law courts, which interpret laws. Although the Queen is officially head of all three branches, she has little direct power. Parliament has three elements: the House of Commons, the House of Lords and the Queen as its Head. Members of the House of Commons are elected by the voters of 659 constituencies. They are known as MPs, or Members of Parliament. The Prime Minister, or leader of the Government, is also an MP, usually the leader of the political party with a majority in the House of Commons. The Prime Minister is advised by the Cabinet of about twenty other ministers. The Cabinet includes the ministers in charge of major government departments or ministries. Departments and ministries are run by civil servants, who are permanent officials. Even if the Government changes after an election, the same civil servants are employed. The House of Lords consists of the Lords Temporal and the Lords Spiritual. The Lords Spiritual are the Archbishops of York and Canterbury, together with twenty-four senior bishops of the Church of England. The Lords Temporal used to consist of hereditary peers who inherited their titles (their rights have been severely curtailed recently); life peers who are appointed by the Queen on the advice of the Government for various services to the nation; and the Lords of Appeal (Law Lords) who become life peers on their judicial appointments. 1. What branches of power does the British constitution establish? 2. What elements does the British Parliament consist of? 3. Who sits in the House of Lords?
342 The Best of Just English MONARCH’S POWERS IN BRITAIN Most functions performed by the monarch in Britain are, in practice, carried out on the advice of the Prime Minister or other ministers. A central power still possessed by the monarch is the choice and appointment of the Prime Minister. By convention, this person is normally the leader of the political party, which has a majority in the House of Commons. However, if there is no clear majority or if the political situation is unclear, the monarch could in theory make a free choice. In practice, advice is given by royal advisers and leading politicians in order to present an acceptable candidate. Constitutionally, the monarch has the right to be informed of, and advised on, all aspects of national life by receiving government documents and meeting regularly with the Prime Minister. The monarch also has the right to encourage, warn and advise ministers. This role could be a source of potential power not only in Britain, but also in the Commonwealth of which the monarch is head. It is difficult to evaluate the influence of monarchical advice on formal and informal levels, although critics suggest that it could be substantial. This raises questions about whether such authority should be held by an unelected, non-democratic figure who could potentially either support or undermine political leaders. The monarch is a permanent fixture in the British political system, unlike temporary politicians, and often has a greater knowledge of domestic and international politics. The monarchy still has a considerable part to play in the operation of government at various levels. Its practical and constitutional importance is illustrated by provisions for the appointment of counsellors of state (or a regent in exceptional cases) to perform royal duties, should the monarch be absent from Britain or unable to carry out public tasks. Traditionalists fear that a modernized monarchy would lose that aura of detachment, which has been described as its main strength. At present, it balances between tradition and modernizing trends. 1. What is the Queen’s main authority? 2. What rights does the Queen possess? 3. Why is there a bitter argument on the Sovereign's powers today?
101 Texts on Law 343 THE ROLE OF THE MONARCH IN BRITAIN The continuity of the English monarchy has been interrupted only by Cromwellian rule from 1649 to 1660, although there have been different lines of descent. The Crown is one of the oldest secular institutions in Britain and there is automatic hereditary succession to the throne, but only for Protestants. Since 1689 the monarch’s executive powers have been limited. But the monarch still has a number of formal constitutional roles, and serves as head of state, head of the executivejudiciary and legislature, commander- in-chief of the armed forces, and ‘supreme governor’ of the Church of England. Ministers and officials of the central government are the monarch’s servants, and judges, military officers, peers and bishops of the Church of England swear allegiance to the Crown. In holding these positions, the monarch personifies the British state and is a symbol of national unity. The monarch is expected to be politically neutral, and is supposed to reign but not rule. But there are difficulties in defining the precise powers of the monarch. Proposals have often been made to create rules, which would establish the real powers of the office, clarify the uncertain elements in the monarch’s position, and avoid the dangers of involving the Crown in political and constitutional controversy. However, for all practical purposes the monarch acts only on the advice of political ministers, which cannot be ignored. The monarch cannot make laws, impose taxes, spend public money or act unilaterally. Contemporary Britain is therefore governed by Her Majesty’s Government in the name of the Queen. But the monarch still performs some important executive and legislative duties. These include the summoning, opening, proroguing and dissolving of Parliament; giving the Royal Assent to bills which have been passed by both Houses of Parliament; appointing government ministers and other public figures; granting honours; and fulfilling international duties as head of state. 1. What period in the British History interrupted the hereditary succession to the throne? 2. What authorities does the Queen enjoy? 3. *In your opinion, why should the Sovereign be politically neutral? 4. *Why is the Queen called the nominal head of the country?
344 The Best of Just English CRITICISM OF THE BRITISH MONARCHY Critics who are against the monarchy as a continuing institution in British life maintain that it is out-of-date, non-democratic, too expensive, too exclusive, too closely associated with aristocratic privilege and establishment thinking, and too closely identified with an English rather than a British role. It is argued that the monarchy’s aloofness from ordinary life contributes to class divisions in society and sustains a hierarchical structure. It is also suggested that, if the monarch’s functions today are merely ceremonial and lack power, it would be more rational and democratic to abolish the office and replace it with a cheaper non-executive presidency. Critics who are in favour of the monarchy argue that it is popular, has developed and adapted to modem requirements, and is not remote. It serves as a personification of the state; demonstrates stability and continuity; has a higher prestige than politicians; is not subject to political manipulations; plays a worthwhile role in national institutions; possesses a neutrality with which people can feel secure; and performs an important ambassadorial function in Britain and overseas. The monarchy also has a certain glamour (some would say soap-opera quality) about it, which is attractive to many people. The British public show considerable affection for the royal family beyond its representative role. But the behaviour of some of its younger members, and the role of monarchy itself, have attracted considerable criticism in recent years. Public opinion polls demonstrate majority support for the monarchy as against a republican alternative, although the possibility of a republic in the future is not discounted. But the polls also suggest that the monarchy should adapt more to changes in society; that less public money should be spent on it; and that its income should be subject to income tax (which the monarch has now agreed to pay on some investment income). 1. What arguments do the opponents of the British monarchy give? 2. Why is the monarchy still popular with the British public? 3. What changes do the British suggest to perfect the institution of monarchy?
101 Texts on Law 345 WHY THE MONARCHY SERVES THE BRITISH BEST Nowadays seven of the fifteen countries of the European Union are hereditary monarchies. Only one, Greece, has in recent times moved away from this system and that can hardly be described as a conspicuous political success. Spain has returned to a hereditary monarchy, which not only heralded democracy but actually stepped in to save it. There is nothing unmodem about a monarchy. Presidents live in palaces too. And they are no more scandal-free than monarchs —just more political. It may not be a wholly commendable human trait, but the fact is that people do love to peep into the lives of the rich and famous. High profile public figures — and few come under closer scrutiny than the Royal family — increasingly have to live with the fact that the public has an insatiable appetite for the detail and dramas of the family life of celebrities. So divorce and marriage breakdowns are always a sadness for the family. But no sane person would suggest that someone whose marriage has broken down is an unsuitable person to hold a position of responsibility. The Monarch herself has not put a foot wrong since the day she stepped off the plane from Kenya as a Queen in 1952. Here is an imposing array of statistics: weekly audiences with nine different prime ministers over a 45-year span starting with Winston Churchill; state visits to 130 countries; an average of450 public engagements a year. They are impressive enough. But Queen Elizabeth has shown herself to keep the monarchy abreast with the times. On her own initiative she now pays tax on her income. She has appointed a woman as her assistant private secretary. Her direct and personal contact with people from all walks of life would have been unthinkable 40 years ago. And given her head, she would be a much more radical sovereign than it could be imagined. I. What is the current trend in the development of the institution of monarchy? 2. What aspects of Royal life are in the focus of the public's attention? 3. What activities does the Queen routinely perform?
346 The Best of Just English DOWNLOAD THE QUEEN The queen of England is now on-line. In the spring of 1997, Her Majesty Elizabeth II launched the first official royal web site, with 150 pages of history, information, and trivia. We learn that Prince Philip uses one of London’s black taxis for trips around London (even though his preference is for a Range Rover). Instead of scandal about the Prince, we get details of his favorite charity or his trust that encourages start-up ventures. The queen has steadfastly refused to state whether she has herself used a computer. Buckingham Palace has admitted only that she is ‘familiar with the Internet.’ But it’s probably safe to say that she’s not up and surfing. A spokesperson for the palace said that although the queen wants the web site to be ‘user-friendly’, there are no major plans for on-line chat sessions with Her Majesty. The palace also doesn’t plan to reply to questions and comments posted on the site. Buckingham Palace announced it can’t handle any more communiques other than the 200 to 300 letters a day the Queen already receives. There is a ‘visitor’s page’, however, where both fans and critics of the crown can voice their opinions about the web site, comment on matters such as Prince Charles’s relationship with Camilla Parker Bowles, and express their grief over Diana’s tragic death. The site includes color pictures of royal residences, historical tidbits, and even details about royal finances. No doubt tight-lipped Queen Victoria is rolling in her grave. Though London tabloids heralded the queen’s getting wired, her web site is more educational for the general public. Buckingham Palace claims it’s the royal family’s way of‘making the monarchy more accessible.’ If the Palace wishes to reach a larger and younger audience — and opinion polls show that British youth care much less about the House of Windsor than their parents do — the Queen might have to do better than a web site, in this day and age. Perhaps an all-night Royal Rave Party? 1. What sort of information does the royal web-site deliver? 2. What is the attitude of the British youth to the House of Windsor? 3. What is the Queen ’s attitude to the World Wide Web?
101 Texts on Law 347 HOW POPULAR IS THE MONARCH? In the United Kingdom the Queen is really a figurehead representing the country, but she has the power to prevent any politician from establishing a dictatorship. The Queen and her family are a symbol that people can identify with. The British public is obsessed with the details of the royal family life, and when people feel that the Queen has problems with her children, they see her as a real person with the same worries and anxieties as themselves. The monarchy has not always been popular. During the late 19th century there was a growing republican sentiment. During the reign of Elizabeth II the royal family has experienced also some changes. Since the 1980s the public has become much more informed about the lives of the royal family due to in-depth press coverage. Two of Queen Elizabeth’s sons, Prince Charles and Prince Andrew, separated from their wives in 1992; both separations occurred amid a flurry of international press coverage and were surrounded by accusations of infidelity and damaged the reputation of the royal family. But the personality and family image of the Queen, her father and grandfather serve to remove the negative feeling. In 1992 the Queen and Prince Charles agreed to pay income taxes on their personal income, the first time the monarchy has done so. The Queen has always been a roving ambassador for Britain, and if we calculate the increase in trade after a royal visit abroad, the nation probably makes a profit from her activities, and that does not take into account the income from tourism in Britain generated by the monarchy and great state events such as royal weddings. Just how popular is she? A newspaper in London conducted an opinion poll. People were asked, “If there were no monarchy, who would you vote for as President?” More than eighty per cent chose the Queen. /. What makes the British feel so strongly about the royal family? 2. What is the royal family doing to restore its public image? 3. How popular is the Queen with the British public?
348 The Best of Just English THE HISTORY OF SPEAKERSHIP IN BRITAIN The Speaker of the House of Commons acts as Chairman during debates, and sees that the rules laid down by the House of Commons for the carrying out of its business are observed. The Speaker must preserve order in the House. It is the Speaker who selects (or calls) Members to speak. And it is the Speaker who acts as the spokesman for the House on ceremonial and formal occasions — as for instance, when an address of congratulation was presented to the Queen on the occasion of her Silver Jubilee in 1977. Nowadays such occasions are usually happy events; but in past centuries a Speaker might have been called upon to deliver to an autocratic and even despotic Sovereign a message, which might be much less welcome — as, for instance, when the Commons disagreed to raising a tax for the royal revenues. In fact, nine Speakers in older times are known to have died a violent death. The Speakership dates back under its present title to 1377 when Sir Thomas Hungerford was appointed. The Speaker was often, up to the seventeenth century, an agent of the King, though as stated above, some Speakers encountered difficulties when reporting the view of the Commons to the Monarch. During the Civil War, however, the struggle between the Crown and Parliament was reflected in the attitude of Speakers to the King. When King Charles I came to the House in order to arrest five Members for treason, the Speaker ordered him to withdraw. After the Restoration of the Monarchy, Speakers were usually associated politically with Governments and often held an office in the Government. By the mid-nineteenth century, the concept of the Speaker being above any party became the norm. 1. What are the duties of the Speaker as the spokesman for the House? 2. How was the struggle between the Crown and Parliament reflected in the attitude of the Speaker to the King? 3. Why is it important that the Speaker is above any party?
101 Texts on Law 349 THE SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS It is hard to imagine what the House of Commons would be like if the Speakership had not evolved in something like its present form, so central to the House’s whole way of life is the direction and guidance it receives from its chairman. The Speaker acts as Chairman during debates, and sees to it that the rules laid down by the House for the carrying on of its business are observed. It is the Speaker who selects (or calls) Members to speak. He or she acts as the House’s representative in its corporate relations with outside bodies and the other elements of Parliament, the House of Lords and the Crown. The Speaker is also responsible for protecting the interests of minorities in the House. It is obviously essential that debates should be conducted in an orderly way, and unlikely that the course of debate would flow smoothly if there were not some way of regulating who was to speak. The selection of those who are to speak is therefore a very important one for the Chair, and one, which has to be handled with tact and discretion. In a debate, official spokesmen or women for Government and Opposition must take part, as well possibly as those for the minor parties, those Members with constituency interests, those who specialize in the subject under discussion and those simply with a general interest. The Speaker, therefore, has to balance all these requirements when working out who should be called. At the beginning of certain debates, the Speaker may decide to invoke the “short speech” rule, thus limiting individual speeches to a maximum of ten minutes. The Speaker must preserve order in the House, and ensure that its rules of debate are observed. 1. Why is the Speakership so important for the House of Commons? 2. What are the duties of the Speaker? 3. What are the principles of the selection of those who are to speak? 4. Why is the “short speech ” rule invoked?
350 The Best of Just English THE SPEAKER’S DUTIES The Speaker acts as Chairman during debates, and sees that the rules laid down by the House for the carrying on of its business are observed. The Speaker must preserve order in the House, for instance, a Member who makes an allegation against another, or expresses himself in language which the rules do not permit, may be directed to withdraw the remark concerned. In the case of grave general disorder, the sitting may have to be suspended. In the case of willful disobedience by one or more particular Members the Speaker can name* him or them, which will result in their suspension — for a period — from the House. The Speaker has to protect the rights of minorities in the House. He or she must ensure that the holders of an opinion, however unpopular, are allowed to put across their point of view without undue obstruction. The Speaker does not vote in the House. If, however, there is a tied vote**, the Chair must exercise a casting vote. The Speaker must, of course, be above party political controversy and must be seen to be completely impartial in all public matters. All sides in the House rely on the Speaker’s disinterest and respect that he or she must stand aside from controversy. Even after retirement, a former Speaker will take no part in political issues. Assuming the office of Speaker will to a great extent mean shedding old loyalties and friendships within the House. The Speaker must keep apart from old party colleagues or any one group or interest and does not use, for instance, the Commons dining rooms or bars. The Speaker does, however, continue as a Member of Parliament dealing like any other with constituents’ letters and problems. 1. What are the duties of the Speaker? 2. What measures can the Speaker take to preserve order in the House? 3. What restrictions does assuming the office of Speaker suggest? * to name — назвать no фамилии депутата, нарушившего парламентскую дис- циплину ** tied vote — голосование, при котором голоса разделились поровну
101 Texts on Law 351 DEBATE IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS In the House of Commons, Members may speak only from where they were called, which must be within the House, that is, in front of the Chair. They may not speak from the floor of the House between the red lines (traditionally supposed to be two sword-lengths apart). They must stand whilst speaking, but a disabled Member would naturally be allowed to address the House seated. The style of debate in the House has traditionally been based on listening to other Members’ speeches and intervening in them, on spontaneous reaction to opponents’ views, often suffused with wit and humour. It is thus very different from the debating style in use in some overseas legislatures, where reading of set-piece speeches from a podium or from individual desks is much more often the norm. This style of debate makes the Commons Chamber a live, rather noisy place, with robustly expressed opinion, many interventions, expressions of approval or disapproval: sometimes of repartee and banter. There is, of course, a fine line to be drawn between vigorous debate and forthright expression of views, and the deliberate attempt to intimidate an opponent. Members have the right, when speaking, to be heard without unendurable background noise (deliberate or accidental), and the Chair will call for order if it appears there is an attempt to drown out a Member or, for instance, when a number of Members are leaving the Chamber, or conversing loudly. But successive Speakers have taken care not to bridle the traditional vigour and forthrightness of the expression of opinion in the House, for the style of the House of Commons has never thrived on excessive politeness and restraint. The profound deference towards Ministers and Prime Ministers apparent in some overseas parliaments is generally lacking in the Commons. To maintain the spontaneity of debate, reading a prepared speech is not allowed. 1. Describe the general style of debate in the House of Commons. 2. What is the difference in the mode of debate between Parliament in Britain and in other countries? 3. * Which style of debate do you find more appropriate?
352 The Best of Just English UNPARLIAMENTARY LANGUAGE Language and expressions used in the House of Commons must conform with a number of rules. Good temper and moderation are the characteristics of parliamentary language. Objection has been taken both to individual words and to sentences and constructions — in the case of the former, to insulting, coarse, or abusive language (particularly as applied to other Members); and of the latter, to imputation of false motives, charges of lying or being drunk, and misrepresentation of the words of another. Among the words to which objection has been taken by Speakers over the years have been ‘blackguard, coward, guttersnipe, hooligan, rat, swine, stoolpigeon and traitor’. The context in which a word is used is, of course, most important. The Speaker will direct a Member who has used an unparliamentary word or phrase to withdraw it. Members sometimes use considerable ingenuity to circumvent these rules (as when, for instance, Winston Churchill substituted the phrase ‘terminological inexactitude’ for ‘lie’) but they must be careful to obey the Speaker’s directions, or being required to withdraw from the Chamber may follow a refusal to retract an offending expression. The House nowadays allows members of the public (everyone who is not a Member or Officer of the House is a “Stranger”) to be present at its debates. This, however, was historically not always the case; and the right to debate a matter in private is maintained. Should it be desired to conduct a debate in private, a Member declares ‘I spy Strangers’, whereupon the Chair must put the motion that ‘Strangers do withdraw’ without debate. Because the House has not gone into private session since the Second World War, and it is difficult to envisage peacetime conditions when it would be the general will to do so, Members have tended to use ‘I spy Strangers’ as a device of expressing political indignation on a subject or to delay proceedings. If the House did go into private session, no verbatim, sound or television record of that session would be made. In previous times a Member ‘ spying strangers’ meant that they had to withdraw automatically. On one famous occasion in the 1880s, Mr. Biggar, an Irish Nationalist Member, caused the Prince of Wales to be removed by use of this device. I. What purpose do the House of Commons' language bans serve? 2. How do the MPs try to avoid these bans? 3. What measures does the Speaker take against the offender? 4. In what cases is the phrase "I spy Strangers " used?
101 Texts on Law 353 THE ENGLISH LEGAL SYSTEM It is often said that the English legal system looks very fair in theory, but in practice it is difficult for ordinary people to use. Firstly, it is extremely expensive: a good lawyer costs two hundred pounds per hour. Secondly, it is very formal with all sorts of rules in the court. Until recently the judge and the lawyers used to wear extraordinary old-fashioned costumes: black robes, high white collars and white wigs. The inside of the court is rather like a church, with the judge looking down from a seat above the court. The English legal system gives the judge a lot of freedom in deciding on the sentence. The lightest sentence possible is community service. This means unpaid work for a fixed number of hours, on jobs such as painting hospital buildings or gardening for elderly people. There are also fines for smaller things like parking in the wrong place, and these fines are usually not big. But fines can be used for serious crimes, too, if a criminal can not be imprisoned — for example, when a company breaks the law. Then rich people or organisations sometimes pay millions of pounds. The standard punishment for serious offences is prison. Many people feel that criminals should go to prison, but it is far from the perfect answer to the problem. When prisoners are released, they often carry on with their lives of crime; in fact, they meet other criminals inside, get ideas from them, and make useful contacts. The prison system is extremely expensive. Yet judges continue to send large number of people there. There is no death penalty in Britain. It was abolished more than 40 years ago. Although some people think that it must be introduced again, it will hardly ever happen. /. Why is the legal system in Britain difficult for ordinary people to use? 2. What is the lightest sentence possible in Britain? 3. In what cases is an offender liable to a fine in Britain? 4. Why is the prison system far from perfect? 5. What is the public sentiment about the death penalty in Britain?
354 The Best of Just English THE ENGLISH CONSTITUTION The English Constitution is the organic law of Great Britain providing for the form and powers of government. It is rooted in historic traditions and principles of liberty, which, in many respects, antedate the promulgation of the Magna Carta in 1215, and which, since the 19th century, have been held to affirm popular sovereignty. Unlike the US Constitution and most other constitutions, the English Constitution is not a systematic written statement of law, but consists of a body of statutory law, customs, and judicial interpretations; it is frequently called a customary or unwritten constitution. As an example, English law makes no provision for so essential a feature of the British government as the Cabinet, which originated in the 15th century as an advisory council to the king, and developed, in connection with the rise of representative government, to its present status as the executive branch of the government. Unlike constitutions that make explicit provision for their amendment and are often difficult to change, the English Constitution may be changed easily. It may be altered, and in the past it has been altered, through the slow accretion of custom, by an act of Parliament, or by judicial interpretation. Historians emphasize the antiquity and flexibility of the English Constitution. Its uninterrupted development may be traced over a period of more than 900 years, from the time of the Norman Conquest in 1066. Throughout this period it remained adaptable, serving in turn the needs of medieval society and the rule of the bourgeoisie who established representative government and the former British Empire. It is now compatible with such recent liberal measures as comprehensive social insurance and the nationalisation of basic industries and the Bank of England. 1. What are the roots of the British Constitution? 2. What is the difference between the British and American Constitutions? 3. What makes the British constitution flexible?
THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT OF TODAY
356 The Best of Just English THE CONCEPT OF BICAMERAL LEGISLATURE In the waning years of the nineteenth century, political scientist and future President of the United States, Woodrow Wilson, spoke to an audience and outlined his views of the American government. “Our Government, he said, founded one hundred years ago, was no type of an experiment in advanced democracy, as we allowed Europe and even our- selves to suppose; it was simply an adoption of English constitutional system of government.” One aspect of the United States’ English heritage is bicameralism. The concept of bicameralism — a two-house legislature — originated in England and came with the early English colonists to North America. Bicameralism emerged in England’s Parliament. During the 1200s the Great Council that included English nobles and bishops advised the monarch. Knights and elected representatives from towns and regions also met with the Great Council. In the 1300s the elected members and the nobility and bishops began to meet separately, and Parliament became a two-house legislature that included the House of Lords and the House of Commons. Slowly, the Commons gained strength; first by winning the right to discuss tax laws, and later by assuming the power to introduce bills. After the Civil War and the execution of Charles I, Parliament gained control of the government. Then in 1660 Parliament restored the monarchy. By the 1700s nations of the Western world admired and envied Great Britain for its democracy and stability. It was the shining example of the political theory of a balanced government. The pure forms of government, as historian Bernard Bailyn noted, were monarchy, the rule of one; aristocracy, the rule of the few; and democracy, the rule of many or all. All three forms in the course of history had degenerated repeatedly into their evil counterparts: tyranny, oligarchy, and mob rule. But some success could be achieved by mixing elements of these pure forms. 1. How did President Wilson describe the origins of the American government? 2. Describe the structure of a bicameral legislature. 3. *Do you think monarchy inevitably leads to tyranny, or democracy — to mob rule?
101 Texts on Law 357 US CONGRESS In 1989, the US Senate commemorated the bicentennial of its first meeting. By its continuity over the centuries, the United States Congress has vindicated the Framers of the Constitution and affirmed their faith that their great experiment in democracy would endure. American Constitution created a system of checks and balances between the separate Legislative, Executive and Judicial branches of the federal government. In the Legislative branch, the Senate represents each of the states equally, while the House* represents them according to the size of their respective populations. Each state has two senators, who will be referred to in the debate as “the senior senator from..and “the junior senator from...” depending on their length of service. The Constitution assigns specific powers and responsibilities to Congress to enact legislation necessary to provide for the common defense and the general welfare of the United States. It gives the Senate exclusive authority to advise and consent on all nominations and treaties. Most important, the Senate provides a forum where senators, elected by the people, can debate different issues and form the laws under which the nation operates. Although its purpose is not always apparent, each legislative procedure, each action, each debate plays a role in the legislative process. Even the architectural and artistic features of the chamber represent various stages of development in the Senate’s two centuries of history. 1. What branches of government does the Constitution establish? 2. In what way do the Senate and the House represent the states? Explain the difference. 3. What powers of the Senate are mentioned in the text? the House — the House of Representatives
358 The Best of Just English US CONGRESS RULES The main task of each house of Congress is the same — to make laws. Because the House of Representatives and Senate differ in many ways, each chamber has organized itself to carry out its work of making laws. These complex rules enable Congress to carry out its lawmaking duties. Article I of the US Constitution says that each House may determine the rules of its proceedings. Thomas Jefferson compiled the first manual on the Senate rules when he was Vice President. He emphasized the importance of such rules. House rules are generally aimed at defining the actions an individual representative can take. In the Senate, the rules are more flexible and designed to make certain all senators have maximum freedom to express their ideas. For example, the Senate usually allows unlimited debate on proposed legislation, whereas the House limits representatives to speaking for five minutes or less during a debate. With fewer rules, the Senate has a more informal atmosphere. Senators may debate a proposal for weeks or even months. In contrast, the complex rules in the House require that legislation move quickly once it reaches the floor. House debates rarely last more than one day. Moreover, leaders of the House of Representatives have more power than leaders in the Senate. For example, the rules of the House allow its leaders to make key decisions about legislative work without consulting other House members. Most of the work of Congress is carried out in Committees. Because the House is so large, representatives generally do not make a practice of expressing their positions on the floor, where they have only limited time to speak. In the Committees, however, representatives have more influence, and they have the time to study and shape bills. 1. Why does Congress need special rules to regulate its work? 2. What is the difference between the rules of procedure in the House and in the Senate? 3. Why is most of the work carried out in Committees?
101 Texts on Law 359 CONGRESS AND THE PRESIDENT When the Founders of the US Constitution established the principle of separation of powers, they did not make the three branches completely independent. Although each branch has its own functions, they are related in a system of checks and balances. As a result, Congress and the President share certain powers. Thus, many of the President’s most important executive responsibilities — such as making treaties, appointing federal officials and judges, and paying the expenses of the executive branch — require congressional cooperation. On the other hand, all bills Congress passes require the President’s signature before they become law. Overriding a presidential veto requires a two-thirds majority in each house of Congress, which usually is difficult to obtain. Consequently, a veto or even the threat of one is an important legislative power the President exercises. In addition, modem Presidents are expected to develop a legislative program and secure its adoption by Congress. The level of cooperation between Congress and the President has varied throughout history. Usually, the best relations exist between the two branches when the President makes few demands on Congress. Less active Presidents who do not take an aggressive role in shaping legislation may get along well with Congress. Those who propose major new programs will almost surely come into conflict with the legislative branch. Recent Presidents have frequently found it hard to work with Congress for several reasons. In domestic as well as in foreign policy, the President can seldom count upon the automatic support of Congress, even when his own party has a majority in both the Senate and the House. Therefore, he must be able to convince Congressmen, the Representatives and Senators, of his point of view. 1. Why are the three branches of government not completely independent? 2. Why is it difficult to override the president's veto? 3. What does the level of cooperation between the President and Congress depend on?
360 The Best of Just English LAWMAKING IN THE SENATE Visitors going from the House of Representatives to the Senate are often startled by the difference. The Senate chamber is smaller and quieter than the House chamber. Usually only a few senators attend sessions. The Senate chamber has 100 desks — one for each senator — facing a raised platform where Senate leaders preside over sessions. The party leaders or their assistants stay in the Senate chamber at all times to keep the work moving and to look after their party’s interests. As in the House, any member of the Senate may introduce a bill. Procedures for moving bills through the Senate, however, are more informal than in the House. Senate leaders control the flow of bills to committees and to the floor for debate and vote. They do this by consulting closely with one another and with other senators. Senate leaders also try to schedule sessions to fit the interests and needs of as many senators as possible. In contrast to the procedure in the House, individual senators have the power to disrupt work on legislation. As one former Senate leader declared, a senator, “if he wants to exercise power, can tie up the Senate for days, and if he allies himself with a few other Senators, he can tie up the Senate for weeks.” The Senate brings bills to the floor by unanimous consent, a motion by all members present to set aside formal rules and consider a bill. The procedure has not changed much through the years. In 1913 Massachusetts Senator Henry Lodge explained that the Senate conducted most of its business through unanimous-consent agreements. He emphasized that Senators depended on the principle of unanimous consent while discussing both large and generally contested measures, and all the small business of the Senate. 1. Why are visitors to Congress startled by the difference between the two houses? 2. Why is the procedure of debating a bill in the Senate more informal? 3. How can a Senator disrupt the work of his chamber?
101 Texts on Law 361 THE SENATE’S DAILY SESSIONS The ringing of bells throughout the Capitol and the three Senate Office Buildings signals the opening of a day’s session, and announces votes, quorum calls, and other legislative activities. The bells correspond with a series of lights above the doors on the north side of the chamber, and at various locations on the Senate side of Capitol Hill. At the beginning of each daily meeting, the presiding officer accompanies the Senate chaplain to the rostrum for an opening prayer. The Vice President of the United States serves as President of the Senate and therefore its presiding officer. In the Vice President’s absence, the President pro tempore* — generally, but not always, the most senior member of the majority party — presides, or will designate other senators from the majority party to take the chair. Senators must direct all remarks to the presiding officer, whom they address as ‘Mr. President’, or ‘Madam President’. At the long marble desk in front of the presiding officer are the clerks of the Senate. The journal clerk records minutes of the proceedings, as is required by the Constitution. The Parliamentarian advises the presiding officer and members regarding Senate rules and procedures. The legislative clerk calls the roll and receives bills, resolutions, and amendments offered by members. At the two mahogany desks before these clerks are the staffs of the party secretaries, who keep members of their parties informed as to the subject matter at hand and tallies of votes cast. Senate pages are stationed on both sides of the rostrum. They serve as messengers for senators and are selected from among students who are in their junior year of high school. The pages attend early morning classes in a school located at the Library of Congress. 1. Who serves as President of the Senate? 2. What does the journal clerk do? 3. Who are the Senate pages selected from? pro tempore — temporary
362 The Best of Just English THE SENATE’S WORKING DAY The Senate usually begins the day with ten-minute speeches by the Majority and the Minority Leaders, followed by a period designated as “Morning Business”. Members introduce bills and resolutions, which are referred to the various committees for consideration. Members may also request permission to speak briefly on any subject that concerns them. Following ‘Morning Business’ the Senate may consider any nomination and treaty that the President submits for the Senate’s advice and consent. Nominations are confirmed by a simple majority, but the Constitution requires a two-thirds vote of the Senate to approve treaties. For much of the Senate’s history, all executive sessions were conducted in secret, with the galleries cleared and the doors locked, enabling senators to speak freely about the character of nominees and to avoid causing any embarrassment to the nation’s treaty partners. Not until 1929 were executive sessions routinely opened to the public and the press. Legislative business consumes the largest share of the Senate’s time. When committees report out legislation, the Majority Leader will attempt to schedule it for the debate in the chamber. If both parties have agreed to the bill, it may be enacted simply by “unanimous consent”, with only a brief reading of its title and a request by the leadership that it be adopted without objection, generally by voice vote. If a single member objects, however, the Senate might not consider the bill at all, or may debate it at length and a roll call vote* might be ordered. 1. What issues are covered during "MorningBusiness”? 2. What does an executive session usually consist of? 3. How is the bill enacted if both parties agree to it? a roll call vote — поименное голосование
101 Texts on Law 363 THE HISTORY OF IMPEACHMENT Impeachment is the first step in the process specified in the Constitution of the United States for removing the president, vice-president, or other government official from office upon conviction of “treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors.” Since the adoption of the Constitution, only one president, Andrew Johnson (1868), has been brought to trial in the Senate on charges voted by the House of Representatives. The Senate failed by one vote to convict Johnson. In 1974 the House Judiciary Committee voted three charges of impeachment against President Richard M. Nixon, but he resigned from office before the charges could be voted upon by the House. Impeachment proceedings have been brought with some frequency against federal judges. In 1804, Supreme Court justice Samuel Chase was impeached on purely political grounds, but his acquittal (1805) effectively halted the use of impeachment to remove judges for political reasons. It has often been said that the cumbersome and time-consuming process of impeachment is unsuited to the removal of a merely venal judge. Nevertheless, because the Constitution specifies that judges hold office during good behavior, impeachment remains the only means by which a federal judge may be removed. Certain questions concerning the impeachment process have persisted: whether it is judicial or political in nature; how to define high crimes and misdemeanors; and whether a conviction can be appealed to the Supreme Court. Although no conclusive answer can be given, it is safe to say that the judicial process of impeachment will always be infused with political motives. 1. What officials can be impeached? 2. Why does impeachment remain the only means for removal of federal judges? 3. What controversial issues does the impeachment process generate?
364 The Best of Just English IMPEACHMENT Impeachment is the first step in the process ' sPecified in the Constitution of the United $tates ^ог removing the president, vice- president, or other government official from office upon conviction of ‘treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors.’ The " ’ House of Representatives has ‘the sole power и of impeachment, ’ that is, the power of bringing | kZTj charges. The Senate has‘the sole power to try ’F''"' all impeachments.’ A two-thirds vote is required in the Senate for conviction. When the president is to be tried, the chief justice of the United States presides. Conviction in an impeachment proceeding results only in removal from office and disqualification to hold ‘any office of honor, trust, or profit under the United States.’ A person convicted in an impeachment, however, is subject to further “indictment, trial, judgement, and punishment according to Law.” Impeachment originated in England, where the House of Commons would present articles of impeachment to the House of Lords, which then tried the case. A well-known instance was the impeachment and trial (1786—1795) of Warren Hastings, first governor general of India. The Framers of the US Constitution, although committed to a separation of powers and independence of the three branches of government from one another, believed that a means must be provided by which officers thought to be guilty of significant misconduct could be tried and removed. They did not want the procedure to be overly simple to invoke, nor the penalty too easily imposed — hence, the requirement of the two-thirds vote for conviction in the Senate, and the stipulation that impeachment be for “treason, bribery, and other high crimes and misdemeanors.” To George Mason’s suggestion that “maladministration” be a ground for impeachment, both James Madison and Gouvemeur Morris objected that so vague a term would surely produce the result that tenure in office would be at the pleasure of the Senate. 1. What is impeachment? 2. What are the grounds for impeaching an official? 3. What consequences does an impeached official face? 4. Why did the Framers of the Constitution work out complicated impeachment proceedings?
101 Texts on Law 365 VOTING IN THE USA Voting by the United States citizens is absolutely vital to the success of American democracy — after all, democracy means rule by the people. Through their votes, Americans have the power to select more than 500,000 government officials at all levels of government. The right to vote, or suffrage, is the foundation of American democracy. Today all the United States citizens over 18 years of age may exercise this right. This situation did not always exist, however. In various periods in the history of the United States, law, custom, and sometimes even violence prevented certain groups from voting. Before the American Revolution, the colonies placed many restrictions upon the right to vote. Women and most blacks were not allowed to vote; neither were white males who did not own property or pay taxes. Also excluded in some colonies were people who were not members of the dominant religious group. As a result, only about 5 or 6 per cent of the adult population was eligible to vote. Why did restrictions exist? Educated men of the time did not believe in mass democracy in which every adult could vote. Even the Founders of the Constitution did not believe in the average person’s ability to make wise voting decisions. In their view voting was best left to wealthy, white, property-owning males. As John Jay, first Chief Justice of the United States, put it, “The people who own the country ought to govern it.” During the first half of the nineteenth century, state legislatures gradually abolished property and religious tests for voting. By the middle of the century the country had achieved universal white adult male suffrage. The fight for woman’s suffrage dates from the middle of the nineteenth century, but not until after World War I, when the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified, was woman’s suffrage on a nationwide basis put into effect. 1. Why is the right to vote so vital for the Americans? 2. Why did voting restrictions exist before World War I? 3. *In your opinion, which people in society should not have the right to vote?
366 The Best of Just English PARTIES AND PARTY SYSTEMS People rule in a democracy, but the voice and will of the individual citizen can easily be lost in a nation as large and diverse as the United States. One way that citizens ensure that government knows their views is for them to organize into groups that wield political power. One example of such a group is the political party. A political party is a group of people with broad common interests who organize to win elections, control government, and thereby influence government policies. Although most nations have one or more political parties, the role that parties play differs with each nation’s political system. In nations that allow more than one political party, the most common political system today is the multiparty system. France, for example, has 5 major parties, and Italy has 10. In such countries voters have a wide range of choices on Election Day. The parties in a multiparty system often represent widely differing ideologies, or basic beliefs about government. In a multiparty system, one party rarely gets enough support to control the government. Several parties often combine forces to obtain a majority and form a coalition government As might be expected when groups with different ideologies attempt to share power, coalitions often break down when disputes arise, requiring new elections. Thus many nations with multiparty systems are politically unstable. Only about a dozen nations have systems where only two parties compete for power. Although minor parties may exist in these democracies, two major parties dominate government. In the United States, they are the Republican party and the Democratic party. They had arisen by the end of President Washington’s second term. They were called the Federalists and the Republicans at that time. 1. How do activities of political parties promote democracy? 2. Why do nations with multiparty systems tend to be unstable? 3. * In your opinion, which party system is more effective?
IОI Texts on Law 367 THE ORIGINS OF THE CIVIL SERVICE SYSTEM When the United States began to establish its civil service system in the 19th century, it had a long history upon which to draw. Historians believe that public government officials — civil servants — date back to the early civilizations of the Middle East. The longest stable civil service in history, however, first developed in China. China’s civil service established and elaborated the world’s greatest system of hiring personnel on competitive basis. The idea to merit rating for promotions, which is a characteristic of modem civil service systems, also originated within the Chinese system. The basic characteristic of China’s civil service system was an educated and honest bureaucracy. Candidates were tested not only on their grasp of specific topics of government but also on their knowledge of history, literature, poetry, and art. Frequently, only 1 out of every 100 candidates passed the examinations and won a position. Every several years thereafter, officeholders were tested again. The results, along with periodic merit ratings based on job performance, determined whether they received a promotion, retained their present level, or were dismissed. Some type of civil service examinations became an accepted practice in many later civil systems. Today the civil service in the United States shares some of the characteristics common to the systems of China, Great Britain, and some other European nations. In particular, they share the concepts of examinations for appointment and promotions based on merit. At the same time, the United States civil service maintains individual characteristics based on the American system of government and values. 1. What system gave birth to the US civil service? 2. How were the candidates for the Chinese civil service selected? 3. What characteristics are shared by the American, European and Chinese civil systems? 3 — 9099
368 The Best of Just English THE AMERICAN CIVIL SERVICE Many people think of a federal bureaucrat as a pencil pusher shuffling papers in Washington, D.C. This image, however, is not accurate. First of all, only 11 per cent of all federal government employees work in Washington, D.C. Most of them work in regional and local offices scattered across the United States and the world. Second, FBI agents, forest rangers, and air-traffic controllers are as much part of the federal bureaucracy as are secretaries and file clerks. Their activities have little to do with bureaucratic paperwork. Federal government employees play a vital role in assuring the smooth functioning of the United States government. Who are the people who work for the many departments and agencies that make up the federal bureaucracy? The typical man or woman in the federal service is about 43 years old and has worked for the government for a total of about 15 years. Federal workers are better educated than workers in the general population. More than a half of them have some college training, while a quarter have done graduate work at universities. Federal workers hold a great variety of jobs. Besides administrative workers, the government also employs doctors, veterinarians, lawyers, cartographers, scientists, engineers, accountants, and many other professionals. The way the civil servants get their offices is also important. During the first years of democracy, George Washington declared that he appointed government officials according to “fitness of character.” Another president, Andrew Jackson argued that long service in the same jobs by any group of workers would only promote tyranny. 1. What common features do federal workers have? 2. What kind of jobs do government employees hold? 3. How did civil servants get their offices in the first years of American democracy? 4. How were governmental officials appointed in the first years of American democracy?
ON RIGHTS AND LIBERTIES
370 The Best of Just English RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF AMERICAN CITIZENS Basic rights are important in American society. The belief in human rights or fundamental freedoms lies at the heart of United States citizenship and enables people to worship as they wish, speak freely, and read and write what they choose. The Constitution guarantees the rights of United States citizens. Along with the enjoyment of these rights, however, comes a responsibility to ensure their strength and endurance. The people wrote the Constitution, and in many ways United States citizens remain the keepers of their own rights. Rights and responsibilities cannot be separated. As citizens, people share a common fate in the power, they have to steer the course of government. As is often said, Liberty lies in the hearts of men and women; when it dies there, no constitution, no law, no court can save it. If people do not carry out their responsibilities as citizens, the whole society suffers. The Constitution of the United States guarantees basic rights in the Bill of Rights, the first 10 amendments, and in several additional amendments. The Framers of the Constitution believed that people had rights simply because they were people. The Constitution and the Bill of Rights inscribe into law those rights that really belong to everybody. The Bill of Rights, in particular, stands as a written guarantee that government cannot abuse the rights of individual citizens. Today the Bill of Rights offers individuals protection not only from congressional actions, but also from acts by state and local governments that may threaten people’s basic rights. 1. According to the text, what is the relationship between rights and responsibilities? 2. What happens when people do not carry out their responsibilities in society? 3. How does the Bill of Rights protect the rights of citizens?
101 Texts on Law 371 FREEDOM OF RELIGION Writing in 1802, President Thomas Jefferson stated that the First Amendment’s freedom of religion clause was designed to build “a wall of separation between Church and State.” This separation makes the United States different from many countries that have a state-supported religion, as in Great Britain. In such countries, public tax money goes to support one particular form of religion. At the other extreme, some countries strongly discourage the practice of any religion. The First Amendment guarantees freedom of religion in two clauses. The first one states that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.” The second clause requires that Congress should not prohibit the free exercise of religion. This Amendment officially separates church and state. In practice, however, religion has been part of public life in the United States for a long time. Although Article VI of the Constitution bans any religious qualification to hold public office, most government officials take their oaths of office in the name of God. Since 1865 the nation’s coins have carried the motto “In God We Trust.” The Pledge of Allegiance* contains the phrase “one nation under God.” Many public meetings, including daily sessions of Congress and most state legislatures, open with a prayer. Government actually encourages religion in some ways. For example, chaplains serve with each branch of the armed forces. Most church property and contributions to religious groups are tax exempt. Thus, while the First Amendment protects religion from government interference, church and state are not totally separate in the United States. Attempting to define the proper distance between the two has often resulted in continuing and sometimes heated controversy. Under the Constitution this task falls on the Supreme Court. 1. What is the aim of separating church and state? 2. How is freedom of religion guaranteed by the US Constitution? 3. *Do you think religion should be encouraged by government? The Pledge of Allegiance — Клятва Верности
372 The Best of Just English FREEDOM OF SPEECH Democratic government requires that every person has the right to speak freely. Of course, most people agree in principle with the right of free speech. Everyone wants it for themselves, but they are sometimes tempted to deny it to others whose beliefs differ greatly from their own. The First Amendment to the US Constitution exists to protect ideas that may be unpopular or different from the majority. Popular ideas usually need little protection, but those who support democracy cherish diversity of opinion. What exactly is speech? Is demonstrating in front of a government building to protest a new law a form of speech? To answer such questions, the Supreme Court has distinguished three general categories of speech that the First Amendment protects. The verbal expression of thought and opinion before an audience that has chosen to listen, or pure speech, is the most common form of speech. Pure speech may be delivered calmly in the privacy of one’s home or passionately in front of a crowd. Because it relies only on the power of words to communicate ideas, the Supreme Court traditionally has provided the strongest protection of pure speech against government control. Actions such as marching or demonstrating are speech plus. Because speech plus involves actions, it may be subject to government restrictions that do not apply to pure speech. The third type of speech, symbolic speech, involves using actions and symbols, instead of words to express opinions. For example, protesters burned the American flag to express their displeasure with the government. Most justices have supported the idea that the rights of free speech must be balanced against the need to protect society and that some restraints on speech may exist. 1. Why is freedom of speech required by democratic government? 2. Which kind of speech is most strongly protected by the Supreme Court? Why? 3. *In which cases do you think freedom of speech should be restricted?
101 Texts on Law 373 FREEDOM OF THE PRESS In writing the First Amendment, the Founders of the Constitution thought of the press as printed material — newspapers, books, and pamphlets. They could not foresee the growth of technology that has created new instruments of mass communication — and new issues regarding freedom of the press. Freedom of the press is closely related to freedom of speech. It moves free speech one step further by allowing opinions to be written and circulated. The press is important because it is the principal way people get information. In today’s world the press includes magazines, radio, and television along with newspapers because of their roles in spreading news and opinions. In many nations prior restraint — censorship of information before it is published — is a common way for government to control information and limit freedom. In the United States, however, the Supreme Court has ruled that the press may be censored in advance only in cases relating directly to national security. The following Supreme Court decision illustrates this principle. A case heard in 1931 concerned a Minnesota law prohibiting the publication of any “malicious, scandalous, or defamatory” newspapers or magazines. An acid-tongued editor of a Minneapolis paper had called local officials “gangsters” and “grafters.” Acting under the Minnesota law, local officials obtained a court injunction to halt publication of the weekly. The Supreme Court ruled the Minnesota law unconstitutional because it involved prior restraint. For years this case defined the Supreme Court’s position on censorship. The Court stressed that a free press means freedom from government censorship. I. What is freedom of the press? 2. What is the relationship between freedom of the press and freedom of speech? 3. What is the US Supreme Court’s position on censorship?
374 The Best of Just English FREE PRESS AND FAIR TRIAL In recent years the First Amendment right of a free press and the Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial have sometimes conflicted. Does the press have the right to publish information that might influence the outcome of a trial? Can courts issue orders that limit news gathering in order to increase the chances of a fair trial? Do reporters have the right to withhold sources of information that may be important to a trial? Before and during a trial, news stories about the crime can make it difficult to secure a jury capable of fairly deciding the case. In 1954, the Supreme Court overturned the conviction of Samuel H. Sheppard, for just such reasons. A prominent Cleveland physician, Sheppard was convicted of killing his wife. The case had attracted sensational press coverage. Pretrial news reports practically called Sheppard guilty. During the trial reporters interviewed witnesses and published information damaging to Sheppard. The Supreme Court ruled that press coverage had interfered with Sheppard’s right to a fair trial. Sheppard was later found not guilty. In the Sheppard decision, the Court described several measures judges might take to restrain press coverage of a trial. These included: reducing pretrial publicity; limiting the number of reporters in the courtroom; placing controls on reporters’ conduct in the courtroom; isolating witnesses and jurors from the press; and having the jury sequestered, or held in custody, until the trial is over. On the other hand, in 1972, the Supreme Court ruled that the First Amendment does not give special privileges to news reporters. “Reporters,” the Court said, “like other citizens, must respond to relevant questions put to them in the course of investigation or criminal trial.” The Court added that any special exemptions must come from Congress and the states. I.In what way does the right of a free press conflict with the right of a fair trial? 2. Why did the Court overturn the conviction of Samuel H. Sheppard? 3. What measures can a judge take to restrain press coverage of a trial?
101 Texts on Law 375 MASS MEDIA IN A DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY Today more homes in the United States have television than a toilet. The average adult watches TV three hours each day, and the average child — four. By the time most American youths graduate from high school, they will have spent more time in front of the television than in class. In addition, Americans average 18 hours per week listening to radio, three hours per week reading newspapers, and almost 2 hours each week reading magazines. Truly, Americans live in a media age; but what are they learning about their government and politics? Unless a citizen is actually in the White House, on the floor of a state legislature he or she cannot experience directly what is happening. Citizens today know the political world largely through the pictures, words, and expressions the mass media communicate to them. In reality, politics and the mass media have become inseparable. Supreme Court Justice Lewis F. Powell explained the importance of the mass media for citizens in a democracy. He argued that an informed public depends upon accurate and effective reporting by the news media. No individual can obtain for himself the information needed for the intelligent discharge of his political responsibilities. For most citizens the prospect of personal familiarity with newsworthy events is hopelessly unrealistic. In seeking out the news the press therefore acts as an agent of the public at large. It is the means by which the people receive this free flow of information and ideas essential to intelligent self-government. Thus, the mass media have come to influence American government and politics in ways that politicians from the last century, let alone the Founders of the Constitution, could have never predicted. I. What is the role of mass media in the life of an average American? 2. Why have politics and mass media become inseparable? 3. Whose interests are represented by mass media? 4. * In your opinion, what purpose should mass media serve in society?
376 The Best of Just English PROTECTING THE RIGHTS OF THE ACCUSED Dealing with crime and criminals poses a serious challenge to democratic political systems. On the one hand, society must protect itself against criminals. At the same time, individual rights must be preserved. Justice in a democracy means protecting the innocent from government police power as well as punishing the guilty. To deal with this challenge, the Founders of the US Constitution provided for a system of justice designed to guard the rights of the accused as well as the rights of society. Laws were to be strictly interpreted, trial procedures fair and impartial, and punishments reasonable. Later, the Fourteenth Amendment further protected the rights of the accused. The police need evidence to accuse people of committing crimes, but getting evidence often requires searching people or their homes, cars, or offices. To protect the innocent, the Fourth Amendment guarantees the right of people to be secure in their persons, houses, and papers, against unreasonable searches and seizures. What constitutes unreasonable searches and seizures? No precise definition has been made, so the courts have dealt with Fourth Amendment issues on a case-by-case basis. Today the police must state under oath that they have probable cause to suspect someone of committing a crime. Then they must obtain a warrant from a court official before searching for evidence or making an arrest. The warrant must describe the place to be searched and the person or things to be seized. Before 1980,23 states had search laws that permitted police to enter a home without a warrant if they had probable cause to believe that the occupant had committed a felony, or a major crime, but in 1980, the Supreme Court ruled that, except in a life-threatening emergency, the Fourth Amendment forbids searching a home without a warrant. J. How does the US Constitution ensure the administration of justice? 2. What action should police take prior to arresting a suspect? 3. What has changed in the law since 1980?
101 Texts on Law 377 CRUEL AND UNUSUAL PUNISHMENT The Eighth Amendment to the US Constitution forbids “cruel and unusual punishment,” the only constitutional provision specifically limiting penalties in criminal cases. The US Supreme Court has rarely used this provision. For example, in 1981 the Court ruled that putting two prisoners in a cell built for one is not cruel and unusual punishment. There is a great controversy, however, over the death penalty. During the 1970s the Supreme Court handed down several decisions on the constitutionality of the death penalty. In 1972, the Court ruled that capital punishment as then administered was not constitutional. The Court found the death penalty was being imposed in apparently arbitrary ways for a wide variety of crimes and mainly on African Americans and poor people. This decision warned the states that the death penalty needed clarification. Thirty-five states responded with new death penalty laws. These laws took two approaches. North Carolina and some other states made the death penalty mandatory for certain crimes. In this way, they hoped to eliminate arbitrary decisions. It is argued, however, that such laws failed to take into consideration the specifics of a crime and any possible mitigating circumstances. Georgia and several other states took a different approach. They established new procedures for trials and appeals designed to reduce arbitrary decisions and racial prejudice in imposing the death penalty. In one case the Court ruled that under adequate guidelines the death penalty does not constitute cruel and unusual punishment. The Court stated, ‘Capital punishment is an expression of society’s outrage. It is an extreme sanction, suitable to the most extreme of crimes.’ 1. Why is there a great controversy over the death penalty in America? 2. What are the death penalty laws in the US nowadays? 3. What two approaches to death penalty are described in the text? 4. *Do you think capital punishment should be used in a democratic state?
378 The Best of Just English THE MIRANDA WARNING “You have the right to remain silent; anything you say can be used against you...”, these are the words of the Miranda warning which was created as a result of 1966 United States Supreme Court case, Miranda vs. Arizona. It began when Ernesto Miranda was arrested at his home and taken into custody to the police station, where he was identified by a witness as the man who had kidnapped and raped a woman. Police officers took Mr. Miranda into an interrogation room and two hours later emerged with a written confession signed by Mr. Miranda that also stated that the confession was made voluntarily and with full knowledge of his legal rights. The officers, however, failed to advise Mr. Miranda that he had a right to have an attorney present. The United States Supreme Court ruled that the confession could not be used as evidence of Mr. Miranda’s guilt because he was not fully advised on his legal rights, which included the right to have his attorney present. The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution states that no person can be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law. To ensure that other accused criminals are made aware of their constitutional rights, the Supreme Court ruled that a suspect who is taken into custody and interrogated must receive a warning of the following rights: the right to remain silent, that anything he says can be used against him in a court of law, that he has a right of the presence of an attorney, and that if he can not afford an attorney, one will be appointed for him prior to any questioning if he so desires. The Miranda warning is now applied by law officers throughout the United States as a result of this ruling. /. Why is the warning about the legal rights of the American citizens called "the Miranda warning"? 2. Why did the court rule that Mr. Miranda's confession couldn’t be used against him? 3. What is the aim of the US Supreme Court ruling?
101 Texts on Law 379 WATERGATE Watergate is the popular name for the political scandal and constitutional crisis that began with the arrest (June 17, 1972) of five burglars who broke into the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate office building in Washington, D.C. It ended with the resignation (Aug. 9, 1974) of President Richard M. Nixon. The burglars and their two co-plotters were indicted on charges of burglary, conspiracy, and wiretapping. Four months later, they were convicted and sentenced to prison terms by a District Court Judge, who was convinced that pertinent details had not been unveiled during the trial and proffered leniency in exchange for further information. As it became increasingly evident that the Watergate burglars were tied closely to the Central Intelligence Agency and the Committee to Re-elect the President (CRP), some of Nixon’s aides began talking to federal prosecutors. The defection of Nixon’s aides quickly implicated others in Nixon’s inner circle. The Senate established an investigative committee to look into the growing scandal. Amid increasing disclosures of White House involvement in the Watergate break-in and its aftermath, Nixon announced the resignations of the two of his closest advisors, and the dismissal of his counsel. Growing suspicion of presidential involvement in the scandal resulted in an intensification of the investigation. Soon it became clear that Nixon had been involved actively in the cover-up from its beginning. These disclosures destroyed the president’s remaining congressional support. With the House* impeachment inevitable and Senate conviction probable, Richard Nixon became (Aug. 9, 1974) the first US chief executive to resign. 1. What is the essence of the Watergate affair? 2. What charges would President Nixon havefaced if he hadn ‘t resignedfrom office? 3. Why did President Nixon resign? 4. What did Nixon’s involvement in the affair result in?

Just English йи Clones are Coming Pacts and Opinions Discussion
Cloning was invented by God who created Eve out of Adam s rib
UNIT 1 SEPARATING FACTS FROM FICTION Terms of Discussion Before reading the texts, explain the following notions. • genetic engineering • biotechnology • sociobiology • eugenics • nurture • acculturation • megalomania • infertility • to be physically identical • to be genetically superior • to be behaviourally identical • in-vitro fertilisation • test-tube babies Question Time Using your background knowledge, answer the following questions. 1. What do you think human cloning means? 2. Is cloning the same as copying? 3. Were people ‘twinned’ in the past? 4. Is cloning a matter of technology, morality and religion or politics? Time for Reading Breakthrough of the Century Cloning has always caught the public imagination. We now have the technology to take a few cells from a modem day Einstein, or a musical genius or a child prodigy and to create hundreds of babies which have exactly the same genes. Of course, as identical twins, clones will have individual differences, separate identities — separate souls. However, studies of twins raised apart show remarkable similarities. There is more in our genes than we often realise.
384 The Best of Just English Just think how attractive that could be to some dictator who fancies the idea of watching himself growing up, or dreams of populating the world with a new race of genetically superior people. Reasons why people want human cloning may be rational or irrational. A recent U.S. survey conducted by CNN found that 6 per cent of U.S. citizens think human cloning could be quite a good idea. These reasons may vary widely. Here are a few: • Recover someone who was loved — a twin, a reminder. • Infertility — why not use a cell of your own to give birth to your own twin? • Eugenics — an attempt to improve the human race. • Megalomania — a desire to reproduce one’s own qualities. • Spare parts—using a cell from your own body to duplicate yourself. • Assisting medical research. • Just curiosity. Hello, Dolly! On February 22, 1997 scientists at the Roslin Institute in Edinburgh, Scotland announced that they had done cloning of a mammal from an adult cell. What does this mean? In general terms, the scientists took a mammary cell from a sheep and put it into an egg. They let this egg grow into an embryo, and then transplanted this fused embryo and put it in a recipient ewe, acting as a surrogate mother. This occurred late in January 1996. This was a crucial day for the cloning world. On July 5 at 4 p.m. Dolly was bom in a shed down the road from the institute. The scientist given the credit was a 52-year-old embryologist Dr. Ian Wilmut. Unfortunately, six years later Dolly passed away, but she remains the “Pioneer Clone”. For details of Dolly’s life and death in the spotlight of public attention see Unit 2.
Clones are Coming 385 Use a cell from your own body to duplicate yourself. Just Facts Cloning is a method that involves the production of a group of identical cells or organisms that all derive from a single individual. It is not known when or how cloning humans really became a possibility, but it is known that there are two possible ways that we can clone humans. The first way involves splitting an embryo into several halves and creating many new individuals from that embryo. The second method of cloning a human involves taking cells from an already existing human being and cloning them, in turn creating other individuals that are identical to that particular person. With these two methods almost at our fingertips, we must ask ourselves two very important questions: Can we do this, and should we? A Time magazine poll reported that 74 per cent of those asked believe it is against God’s will to clone human beings. The U.S. President has banned federal funds from being used for human cloning research, stating that, “Any discovery that touches upon human creation is not simply a matter of scientific inquiry, it is a matter of morality and spirituality as well... Each human life is unique, bom of a miracle that reaches beyond laboratory science...” But others argue in favour of continuing human cloning research, of continuing to clone human embryos and perhaps cloning adult humans in the future. Some arguments in favour of human cloning might include the fact that cloned human embryos would make research into genetics and genetically related diseases, and their treatment or prevention, much easier and cheaper. Cloning embryos could also facilitate the process of in-vitro fertilisation, since the collection and replacement of ova is often painful and traumatic, and can be unsuccessful. Embryo cloning is also seen as a potential treatment for infertility when in-vitro fertilisation is not available, such as when parents are infertile, or when one or both parents has a genome coding for certain undesirable traits or diseases, or if the parents are homosexual couples. Cloned embryonic tissues might be used for the replacement of lost or diseased tissues. Adult cloning might appeal to those who desire children/adults who are genetically identical to themselves, or genetically identical to someone who they love or admire. There may be many other, personal reasons why
386 The Best of Just English parents would want their children to be genetically identical to someone who is a non-family member. Cloning could provide a genetically identical replacement for a lost loved one. However, it is important to remember that a genetic clone, although sharing an identical genome with their donor, will not be physically and behaviourally identical to their donor. The clone will only be genetically identical to the donor. Their physical and behavioural characteristics will differ in many important and significant ways. The Words of Wisdom The most commonly cited ethical and moral arguments against human cloning seem to originate from religious perspectives. These religious arguments can even be made by politicians and scientists with religious sympathies. Many religious philosophies teach, for example, that human life is unique and special and should be created, determined and controlled only by their deities. Many religions believe in the existence of, and in the individuality of, a human soul. Many Christians, for example, are concerned about whether it will be possible to clone the human soul, along with the human body. Not all religious leaders feel the same. In contrast to the opinions of their peers, some Jewish and Muslim religious leaders testified before the National Bioethics Advisory Commission that they feel that embryo and cloning research might provide discoveries that would lead to an appropriate way to counter infertility. These will be some of the most difficult and interesting questions that need to be decided. Would a cloned human be an individual? Would it really be a human, with a soul? And what if this clone were then cloned again, and again? What would their status and roles be? Other questions and issues include a revitalisation of the “nature/nurture” debate. Will genetically identical people be physically and behaviourally identical, too? Will cloned humans really look exactly alike? Will they have identical personalities? How will clones impact the future of twin studies meant to ferret out the different impacts of genes versus the environment? What will human clones be able to contribute to the perspectives of sociobiology? The emergence of new technologies creates a new set of cultural events and their consequences with which human cultures must come to terms. Humans must define a status and role for any new technology. This is a process of adaptation and acculturation. In a sense, this is a process whereby humans try to decide what a new technology means to them.
Clones are Coming 387 Did You Know? Does the word “clone” mean “copy” ? It does not. The etymology of the word “clone” is the Greek term “cion” which means “twig”. A twig shares the genetic information of its parent plant, but will not look the same. The word “clone” is often used as “copy”, but one must bear in mind that only the genetic information is copied — the person can never be copied. Will a clone look exactly like the original? Cloning ensures that the genetic material of the offspring will be identical to the original. It does not ensure that the offspring itself will be identical to the original. Even if the genetic design is the same, surroundings and experience affect personality and lifestyle to such a great degree that in some cases the clone bears little resemblance to the original. The clone will have different eating habits. He or she will have different tastes in design, music, taste, art and fashion. And since character and personality affect one’s facial expression, the clone is even likely to be distinct in physical appearance. Twins often resemble each other closely because they not only share genetic information, but also environment and history.
388 The Best of Just English Will my clone and I be interchangeable? If you, for example, clone yourself at age 30, there will be a 30-year age difference between yourself and your clone. This alone precludes interchangeability. What’s the difference between in-vitro fertilisation and cloning? In-vitro fertilisation involves taking an egg cell from a female, fertilising it in the laboratory with sperm cells from a male, and thus creating an embryo. Hence the offspring is produced by sexual reproduction (even if no sexual intercourse takes place). The child inherits genetic material from both the mother and the father. In cloning, meanwhile, the child is produced by asexual reproduction. The child inherits genetic material only from the original organism (also known as the “template”). Did You Get It? I. Answer the following questions. 1. What is the new biotechnology called ‘cloning’? 2. Why has cloning always caught public imagination? 3. What are the rational reasons for people to want human cloning? What are the irrational ones? 4. What do you know about Dolly the sheep? 5. What is the general public opinion about cloning? 6. What are the most commonly cited moral and ethical arguments against cloning? 7. Do all religious leaders stick to the same opinion about cloning? 8. Will genetic human clones be physically and behaviourally identical to their donors? Why? 9. Why do you think most people are against cloning? IL Fill in the gaps with the appropriate words and expressions from the box. in the wrong direction; in the news; bizarre; science fiction novels; experience; unbelievable possibilities; bombarded
Clones are Coming 389 Cloning humans is an idea that has always been thought of as something that could be found in, but never as a concept that society could actually__________. It is much________________. The public has been with newspaper articles, magazine stories, books, television shows, and movies as well as cartoons. Much of this information in these sources leads the public______and makes them wonder how easy it would be for everyone around them to be cloned. ____________ideas about cloning lie in many science fiction books and scare the public with their. Words, Words, Words... I. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions. 1. to clone; a clone; cloning; cloning technology 2. a child prodigy 3. identical twins 4. to fancy an idea 5. a surrogate (substitute) mother 6. to be given a credit 7. to be a matter of scientific enquiry 8. a peer 9. to testify 10. to provide a discovery 11. a revitalisation 12. environment 13. to address a goal/need II. Fill in the gaps with the prepositions from the box and paraphrase the expressions in bold type. upon, from, with, beyond, into, to, to, to 1. The new film he is making touches __________the problems of young offenders and appeals_________human feelings. 2. What country does this custom originate________? 3. Millions of people in the world have access ________modem technologies. 4. Human civilisation is now facing the necessity of coming to terms the consequences of new scientific and technological developments.
390 The Best of Just English laboratory 5. Moral and spiritual issues often reach far science. 6. Human cloning, along with research genetics, will greatly contribute treatment of genetically related diseases. Ш. Give synonyms for the following words. • a human being • to ban • to facilitate • rational • crucial • traumatic • unsuccessful • a disease • significant • appropriate IV. Give the opposites of the following words. • moral • legal • painful • direct • reliable • to improve • safe • significant • appropriate Means of Discussion Study the phrases below which contain words and expressions used to talk about. CAUSE, REASON, PURPOSE and RESULT: Cause • Owing to the weather conditions, the flight was delayed. • The delay was due to the weather conditions. • The delay was caused by the weather conditions. • The cause ofthe delay was a thunderstorm. Reason and Purpose • Her reason for not going with us was that she had no money, or: • The reason she didn’t go with us was that she had no money.(less formal) • I wonder what his motives were in sending that letter? (purpose) Result • He missed a lot of classes. As a result / As a consequence/ Consequently, he failed his exams. • The result/consequence of all these changes is that no one is happy any more, (less formal). __ _ ... . >
Clones are Coming 391 • The rise in prices sparked off a lot of political protest (often used for very strong, perhaps violent, reactions to events). • The President’s statement gave rise to I provoked I generated a lot of criticism, (slightly less strong than spark off). • The new law has brought about / led to great changes in education, (often used for political/ social change). • This problem stems from the inflation of recent years.(explaining the direct origins of events) • The court-case arose out of allegations made in a newspaper, (the allegations started the process that led to the court-case) • I wonder what prompted him to send that letter? (reason/cause) • She wrote to the press with the aim of exposing the scandal, (purpose) • I’ve invited you here with a view to resolving our differences, (a bit more indirect than with the aim of) • He refused to answer on the grounds that his lawyer wasn’t there, (reason) • The purpose of their visit was to inspect the equipment. • His remarks resulted in everyone getting angry. • The events had an outcome that no one could have predicted, (result of a process or events, meetings, discussions, etc.) • The upshot of all these problems was that we had to start again, (less formal than outcome). • When the election results were announced, chaos ensued, (formal) Now, using these expressions, think of at least 7 sentences of your own, referring to the possible applications and the future of cloning. Time to Talk In groups, discuss the following questions, employing the vocabulary of the Unit, as well as CAUSE, REASON, PURPOSE and RESULTphrases. 1. What are the needs and goals the cloning technology might serve? 2. Who will have access to the technology and its products, for example, will it be only special individuals or classes of people? 3. Who will be benefited, and who will be harmed, indirectly as well as directly, by the implementation of this new technology? 4. What is the best case, and the worst case, scenario if this technology were encouraged? 5. The “nature/nurture” debate: will genetically identical people be physically and behaviourally identical, too? 6. Identity and soul: how do these two notions correlate?
UNIT 2 YESTERDAY S NEVER IS TODAY S WHY NOT: A GLIMPSE OF HISTORY Terms of Discussion Before reading the texts, explain the meaning of the following words and expressions. • viable • to be ‘twinned’ • fetal • nuclear transfer • embryo • offspring • mammals • to breed • ageing • lifespan • genome Question Time Using your background knowledge, answer the following questions. 1. Have you ever read any fiction stories or seen any films where the issue of human cloning comes up? a) Retell the plot of one of these stories. What problems do they touch upon? b) Render into English the article “Пока ученые спорят, Голливуд вовсю клонирует” from the Appendix. 2. What results do people try to obtain by breeding animals? Give examples.
Clones are Coming 393 Time for Reading The History of Cloning 5000 B.C. — A better breed of corn Early humans discover that if they plant seeds produced by the heartiest plants, the next crop will be a strong one. This is the first step in manipulating life to suit human needs — the ultimate goal of cloning. 1000 B.C. — Mules, the original hybrid To ease their backbreaking labour, farmers breed female horses with male asses to produce mules. Mules are desirable beasts of burden because of their endurance, surefootedness, intelligence, and long lifespan. 1938 — Cloning is envisioned The earliest known instance of cloning was first envisioned by Hans Spemann, a German scientist. He proposes what he calls a ‘fantastic experiment’. He suggests taking the nucleus from a cell of a late- stage embryo juvenile or adult, and transplanting it into an egg. In other words, cloning. 1952 — A tadpole is cloned A tiny tadpole makes history as the first cloned animal. Using cells from a tadpole embryo, Robert Briggs and Thomas King create new tadpoles identical to the original donor. 1965 — Cloning goes camp Cloning goes camp in the movie classic, “The Human Duplicators.” Primitive special effects dominate this hilarious alien-invaders flick. The plot is somewhat difficult to follow, but the low-budget shots of the alien spacecraft and the cloning process make this a must-see. 1972 — Xeroxing a gene Cloning steps down to the minute level with the first cloning of a gene. Scientists isolate the gene, then bind it to an organism that incorporates
394 The Best of Just English the gene into its own DNA and multiplies, producing many copies of the desired gene. 1976 — From mice to men Rudolf Jaenisch of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, Calif., injects human DNA into newly fertilised mouse eggs to produce mice that are part human. When the mice reproduce, they pass their human genetic material to their offspring, creating a slew of so-called transgenic mice. Different human diseases can be studied by creating mice with the appropriate genetic composition. 1978 — The world’s first test-tube baby The world clamours for a glimpse of Baby Louise, the first child conceived through in-vitro fertilisation. Using the husband’s sperm, British doctors fertilise an egg in a petri dish, then implant the embryo in the uterus of the healthy woman. 1978 — “The Boys from Brazil” What would happen if cloning technology fell into the wrong hands? Laurence Olivier, Steve Guttenberg and Gregory Peck star in this Third Reich thriller based on the premise that the Nazis have relocated to South America, only to continue their evil quest for a “pure race,” this time through cloning. 1978 — A tale of human cloning David Rorvik’s book, “In His Image: The Cloning of a Man,” is published. In the novel, a man is cloned from skin cells. But this would be scientifically impossible. Although skin cells contain all of the genes needed for an embryo to develop, only the skin genes are active. Thus, all that would be reproduced would be more skin cells. 1987 — From embryo to ewe The first mammals, sheep and cows, are cloned from embryonic cells. But animals cloned from embryonic cells contain the genetic material of both parents because the embryos are sexually fertilised. Clones from embryonic cells from the same parents fertilised at different times are as different as brothers and sisters.
Clones are Coming 395 1993 — Replicating T.Rex Dino-clones appear in “Jurassic Park.” A few strands of prehistoric DNA have fossilised, and that is enough for an ambitious theme-park owner to wreak genetic havoc. Any plot in Steven Spielberg’s money-churning franchise is merely an excuse to string together amazing special-effects scenes of raptors running rampant, but that does little to detract from the most successful cloning movie ever made. 1993 — “All about Eve” Clones show upon “The X-Files.” Television’s best-loved FBI agents are assigned to a mysterious case in which identical girls on opposite coasts each wind up with a dead parent. It turns out the girls share a secret — and that is not all they share, either. A genuinely spooky episode of the cult-favourite show — demand among viewers was so high that Fox has marketed a videotape of the program. 1995 — Sequencing the genome Sequencing all of a bacterium’s genetic material is no easy task for J. Craig Venter of the Institute for Genomic Research in Rockville, Md. Venter uses chemical analysis to identify all the genes of Hemophilus influenza, the bacterium that causes meningitis and children’s ear infections. Scientists hope to sequence the human genome by 2005, which would enable scientists to target specific genes for research. 1996 — Keaton’s comic cloning Michael Keaton stars in the harmless comedy, “Multiplicity,” as a contractor unable to juggle the demands of his busy life. The solution? A mad scientist makes a few extra versions of him to go around. The film skips over any messy scientific detail, but the sight of Keaton playing off multiple versions of himself is enough to give pause to anyone considering lending themselves an extra pair of hands. 1997 — Hello, Dolly Dolly the sheep is cloned and bom in 1996, but the world doesn’t say hello to Dolly until 1997, when her existence is revealed. Using older techniques as well as some new tricks, Scottish researcher Ian Wihnut
396 The Best of Just English clones Dolly from an adult cell. He hopes to use this scientific advancement to clone transgenic livestock. 1998 — A seed of evil? Dr. G. Richard Seed, a Chicago physicist, an expert in artificial fertilisation, announces his intention to clone human beings. Dr. Seed’s goal in this case is to allow childless couples to raise children. He says he has volunteers who wish to raise a child who would be the clone of his own parents. 1998 — Cloning to be banned Nineteen European States and most states of the U.S. propose to introduce legislation which bans human cloning. 1998 — Old-fashioned ways are best? On April 13, Dolly the sheep, the world’s first cloned animal, becomes a mother, giving birth to a female lamb called Bonny. The baby lamb was bom in the ‘old-fashioned way’ without involving cloning technology. Despite Dolly’s unusual origins, the birth of her lamb confirms that she is able to breed normally and produce healthy offspring. 1999 — The dead and the living In Texas, a new calf was cloned from a dead bull. Dutch scientists announced their intention to clone a mammouth, using the genetic material from a prehistoric mammal found in Siberia. The “original” animal died 20,380 years ago. 2001 — Legal dispute On January 22, 2001 after a lengthy debate, the House of Lords — the upper chamber of the British Parliament — passed a bill legalising the cloning of human embryos. However, in November 2001 emergency legislation to ban human reproductive cloning in the UK got the backing of peers in the House of Lords. France and Germany sought a UN ban on human cloning, stating that cloning is “contrary to human dignity”. 2001 — First human embryo cloned amid controversy? U.S. researchers from Advanced Cell Technology (ACT) in Worcester announced that they had cloned human embryos for the first time. Their aim, they say, is not to produce cloned human beings but to create genetically matched stem cells to treat a wide range of diseases. However, some experts
Clones are Coming 397 consider the research a complete failure because the cloned embryos all died very early, long before reaching the multi-cell stage at which stem cells could be harvested. The scientists cautioned that results were “preliminary”. 2001 — It’s no fun to be a cloned mouse, say scientists After following the lives and deaths of a dozen cloned mice for more than two years, researchers in Japan came to a bleak conclusion: a clone’s life is wheezy, liverish and short. 2001 — Copycat Scientists have already cloned sheep, mice, cattle, goats and pigs. But the world’s first cloned cat, announced in December 2001, is the first time one of the two great traditional pets was copied. The world’s first cloned kitten named Cc was created by scientists in Texas using a cell taken from an adult tortoiseshell female. The cloned kitten heralds the possible beginning of a lucrative industry to bring beloved family pets back from beyond. 2002 — Monkey business ANDi (“inserted DNA” spelled backwards) is the first genetically modified rhesus monkey, “produced” at the Oregon regional primate research centre, USA. The birth of ANDi, the first rhesus monkey cloned by embryo splitting, is another incremental step toward designing and perfecting new treatments for human genetic disorders. 2002 — Sect claims to have cloned a human baby The world’s first cloned baby was bom on 26 December, claims the Bahamas-based cloning company ClonAid. But there is no independent confirmation of the claim. The girl, named Eve by the cloning team, was said to have been bom by Caesarean section. The birth at an undisclosed location went “very well”, said Brigitte Boisselier, president of ClonAid. The company was formed in 1997 by the Raelian cult, which believes people are clones of aliens. The claims caused a media frenzy, but the cult’s obsessive secrecy about the identity of the parents and the cloned child provoked suspicion that the whole story was a hoax to raise the profile of the Raelians. 2002 — UN seeks anti-cloning treaty The UN General Assembly’s legal committee created the group to begin wording the anti-cloning treaty. However, the process is expected to
398 The Best of Just English take years, with all 190 member nations given the opportunity to have their say on the issue. Many countries are introducing their own legislation to outlaw human cloning. 2002—2003 — Humans fit for cloning??? Various laboratories and individual scientists announce in the media that they are ready to start work on cloning humans. 2003 — Dolly the sheep dies young She was a copy. And, like most copies, she faded a little bit quicker than the original. Dolly the sheep, the world’s first animal to be cloned from an adult cell, was put to sleep on February, 14, 2003. She was only six and a half years old — barely 40 in human terms. Ian Wilmut, the holder of the cloning project research licence at the Roslin Institute near Edinburgh, made the final decision to put her painlessly to death. She had been suffering from arthritis and a progressive lung disease. After the post mortem Dolly will be donated to the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh, where she will be stuffed and put on display. 2003 — US House votes to ban human cloning The U.S. House of Representatives overwhelmingly voted to ban all forms of human cloning on February 27, 2003, roundly defeating a rival bill that would have allowed the use of cloning technology for medical research. The Human Cloning Prohibition Act of2003 was passed by 241 votes to 155 after several hours of debate. It bans all human cloning, including cloning to create a pregnancy or for medical research. It also makes it a crime to “receive or import a cloned human embryo or any product derived from a cloned human embryo,” with fines of $1 million and 10 years in prison. 2003 — Britain rejects appeal on human cloning On March 13, The House of Lords rejected an appeal by an anti- abortion group. The group had appealed to overturn Britain’s decision to allow therapeutic cloning, under strict licensing conditions, for research into the production of compatible cell tissue for combating disease.
Clones are Coming 399 Get the Facts Straight! Read the following facts andput them in the correct chronological order. • After some unsuccessful experiments scientists managed to duplicate cows, pigs, cats and other animals. • A healthy lamb later bom by Dolly helps counter fears that cloned animals may be prone to age-related disorders. • Dolly, the sheep whose birth in 1996 focused the world on the promise and dangers of cloning dies in Scotland. • Dolly the cloned sheep was transformed again — into a woolly jumper! Her first fleece was made into a sweater which went on show at the Science Museum in London on March 13, 1998. • Dolly displays genetic signs of premature aging. • Dolly is the first animal without a mother and father in the genetic sense. • Dolly begins the second phase of her unnatural existence when her stuffed remains are featured at the Royal Museum in Edinburgh’s exhibit on DNA and cloning (April 11, 2003). • The story about cloning did not start with the famous sheep “Dolly”. A long time ago, in 1962, scientists tried to clone frogs, but they never got past the tadpole stage. Did You Get It? I. Answer the questions. 1. What are the implications of the title “From Seed to Seed”? 2. What is, according to the text, the ultimate goal of cloning? 3. When did the world’s first test-tube baby appear? 4. What is meant by ‘genetic havoc’? How did it become possible in “Jurassic Park”? 5. How does Dr. Wilmut intend to use the scientific advancement of cloning a sheep? 14 - 9099
400 The Best of Just English 6. What is Dr. Richard Seed famous for? 7. What attitude to cloning is being shown by the European and American law-makers? 8. What is, in your opinion, the most amazing fact about Dolly the sheep? 9. What was the public attitude to the Raelians’ claim that they had managed to clone a human? Do you share the scepticism of the media? 10. Do you think cloning cats and dogs will become a lucrative business in the future? Why? II. Fill in the gaps with the appropriate words and expressions from the box. Note that some words can be used more than once. survive; “twinned”; in the distant future ; adult human; in the very near future; viable; fetal; until; improved and perfected; techniques; clones __________the birth of Dolly, it was believed that the ability to clone an adult human was either impossible or possible only_________________. However, human embryos have been______________in the past! These were not true________(although they have been called so) and they were not __________, however, for they did not______. An_____________can be cloned_____________. But a great deal more research and development of the________used to clone Dolly is needed. And it must be____________________for use on human embryos. Sheep embryos have some special characteristics that make cloning them much easier than cloning human embryos. Cloning an adult sheep was extremely difficult to do; over 270 attempts were needed before Dolly was bom. Many____________lambs did not__________the early stages of development. Those lambs that were carried to term were bom with health problems, and all but Dolly did not live long. Words, Words, Words... I. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions and use them in the sentences of your own. 1. to suit human needs 2. to be a must-see 3. to fall into the wrong hands 4. on the premise that...
Clones are Coming 401 5. ‘beasts of burden’ 6. scientifically impossible 7. to wreak genetic havoc 8. to be an excuse 9. premature ageing 10. to counter fears 11. to be assigned to a case 12. to juggle the demands of one’s busy life IL Match each word on the left with the appropriate definition on the right 1. the ultimate goal 2. to detract from 3. to be prone to 4. to string together 5. backbreaking labour 6. money-churning 7. to skip over a) to stick together b) the final aim c) generating huge profits d) to omit in reading or dealing with e) hard physical work f) to have a natural tendency towards something g) to take away a part, to lessen III. Give synonyms for the following words and make a short story (5—7 sentences) using at least 6 of them. • hilarious • mysterious • amazing • spooky • to conceive • to clamour • to improve • to perfect • to reveal IV. Improve your translation skills by translating the following passage into English, using the vocabulary you have just studied. Современная цивилизация немыслима без научно-техническо- го прогресса. Без него были бы невозможны величайшие достиже- ния человечества. Однако бесконтрольное развитие науки и техни- ки, особенно такое бурное, как в прошлом веке, таит в себе большую опасность. Оружие массового уничтожения, техногенные катастро- фы, экологический кризис — все это страшные последствия научно- технического прогресса. Одним из достижений современной науки, вызывающих опасе- ния ученых и общества, стало клонирование. Еще несколько десяти- 14*
402 The Best of Just English летий назад о нем писали лишь писатели-фантасты, тогда как сегодня это тема научных дискуссий и общественных дебатов. Стремительное развитие генной инженерии и расцвет биотехнологий в 1990-е годы создали все условия для клонирования живых существ на практике. В наши дни уже никого не удивишь клонированием овечки, кота или обезьяны — это пройденный этап. Теперь исследователи замах- нулись на большее: их привлекает возможность клонирования чело- веческого существа. Однако последствия такого эксперимента с социальной, юриди- ческой и политической точек зрения пока непредсказуемы. Именно поэтому проблема клонирования стала одной из острейших обще- ственных, правовых и политических проблем нынешнего столетия. Means of Discussion I. Consulting the dictionary, supply the missing word forms. verb noun adjective 9 success successful accomplish ? accomplished achieve ? achievable ? attainment ? fulfil ? fulfilling ? realisation? realisable target ? targeted fail ? ? II. Study the phrases below which contain words and expressions used to describe the degree of SUCCESS and FAILURE. • I managed to contact him just before he left the office. • I don’t think I can manage the whole task today — it’s too big. • We succeeded in persuading a lot of people to join our project. • This company has achieved all its goals/aims/targets for this year. • Do you think this plan will come off (succeed)? • Plans and projects often go wrong or misfire. • A plan or project may falter (go through ups and downs), even if it finally succeeds.
Clones are Coming 403 Use these words and expressions in the sentences of your own, referring to the history of cloning. III. Study the following scale of probability from ‘cannot happen ’ to ‘has to happen \ impossible — unlikely—possible — probable — certain — inevitable Working in groups, imagine you live(d): a) in the Middle Ages (The times of Inquisition) b) in 1917 c) in our time d) in 2050 Talk about the probability of artificially creating people from the point in time you have chosen, using the above-mentioned adjectives. Time to Talk I. In groups, discuss the following question. How can a quest for a ‘pure race’ be made through cloning? Who would be interested in this? II. A. Translate the following paragraph into English. Несомненно, маленькая овечка Долли вызвала психологичес- кий шок во всем мире. О масштабах потрясения свидетельствовала немедленная реакция правительств, ученых, церкви. Президент США выступил со специальным заявлением, в котором назвал экспери- мент сомнительным с точки зрения морали. Британский парламент одобрил резолюцию, согласно которой любые подобные работы не должны выйти за стены лаборатории. Ватикан осторожно высказал мнение, что эти опыты достаточно опасны. Огромная армия журна- листов начала охоту за наиболее сенсационными прогнозами даль- нейшего использования открытия. Так началась ’Тонка клонирования”. Уже с первым блеянием овечки Долли джинн был бесповоротно выпущен из бутылки. Про-
404 The Best of Just English гресс науки остановить невозможно. Это не под силу ни инквизито- рам, ни КГБ и ФБР, ни парламенту, ни церкви. Прогресс — явление стихийное, подобное землетрясению, и его нельзя автоматически приравнивать к прогрессу человеческой цивилизации. Наука, как природа, добру и злу внимает равнодушно. Все дело в том, в чьих она руках, кому и чему служит. В. Continue the text giving at least 5 sensational ideas for using cloning technology.
UNIT 3 A STORM OF CONTROVERSY: MORAL ASPECT OF CLONING Terms of Discussion Before reading the texts, explain the following notions. • ethics/ethicists • DNA • morality/morals • gene pool • scientifically ethical • transplant • identity • mutation • the Hippocratic Oath Question Time Using your background knowledge, answer the following questions. 1. What effective ways of coping with serious diseases are available to modem medicine? 2. Why does society need medical ethics? Could we do without it? Time for Reading Cloning and Beyond The benefits of this bold technique outweigh the risks, and the danger is not what you think. An elderly man develops a disease that destroys vision. To bolster his failing eyesight, he receives a transplant of healthy retinal tissue - cloned from his own cells and cultivated in a lab dish. A baby girl is bom free of the gene that causes a genetically inherited disease, even though both her parents are carriers. The reason? In the
406 The Best of Just English embryonic cell from which she was cloned, the flawed gene was replaced with normal DNA. These futuristic scenarios are not now part of the debate over human cloning, but they should be. There are dangers, but not the ones everybody is talking about. Cloning is the technology that will finally make it possible to apply genetic engineering to humans. First, parents will want to banish inherited diseases. Then they will try to eliminate predispositions to alcoholism and obesity. In the end they will attempt to augment normal traits like intelligence and athletic prowess. Cloning could be vital to that process. Perhaps now would be a good time to ask ourselves which we fear more: that cloning will produce multiple copies of crazed despots, as in the film “The Boys from Brazil”; or that it will lead to the society portrayed in “Gattaca”, the recent science-fiction thriller in which genetic enhancement of a privileged few creates a rigid caste structure. By acting sensibly, we might avoid both traps. Did You Know? How long will I be able to live if I clone myself? Cloning extends your lifespan by exactly zero. The clone, when he/she grows up, will look like you, but will only be a copy in appearance (and even this can vary considerably, according to lifestyle). In any case, whatever happens to the clone will not affect you. You yourself will die, sooner or later, unless someone develops drugs to halt the ageing process. Think of cloning as “just another way of having babies.” Will my clone have a soul? If human beings do indeed have souls in a spiritual sense — this depends on your metaphysical perspective — then it follows that any clone, as a human being, will have a soul. If‘creation by God’ refers to ‘procreation via sex between parents’ (since the difference between clones and non-clones is whether or not the parents had sex) and sex is thus a prerequisite for the creation of a soul, then
Clones are Coming 407 those bom via in-vitro fertilisation should also be considered soulless — a rather strange thought since some of the hundreds of thousands of test- tube babies bom since 1978 have gone on to become priests, nuns, and soul musicians. Could some lunatic clone Hitler if human cloning were perfected? Just possibly — but they wouldn’t get what they wanted. First, they would need some living cells from his body — unless it was frozen or otherwise preserved soon after death they would probably be unusable. More importantly, because of differences in the environment and upbringing clone Hitlers would not act, think or even look necessarily like the original. Could people be cloned without conscious brains (so that their body parts could be harvested with fewer moral qualms)? No. Whatever consciousness is, it doesn’t reside in brain structure or set of genes that could be easily removed from the clone before or during its development. Moreover, attempting to surgically or genetically erase someone’s “consciousness” is itself morally dubious. Could cloning help gay couples to conceive and make men unnecessary for procreation? In principle, yes. Of course a clone would have to be the identical twin of one or the other partner - it would be difficult to duplicate any of the mixing of genes that occurs during sexual reproduction using cloning techniques. What if we end up all alike? The global population is 6 billion. Even if500,000 people are cloned a year, that would still be less than 0.01 per cent of the population. Gene pool diversity remains unaffected.
408 The Best of Just English Should people be interfering with nature? If you didn’t believe in interfering with nature, you wouldn’t see a doctor when you get ill, you wouldn’t take any sort of pills, you wouldn’t use contraceptives, and you would be living in the woods instead of sitting here! Society versus the Individual Bioethics Medical Ethics or Bioethics is a study ofmoral issues in the fields ofmedical treatment and research. The term is also sometimes used more generally to describe ethical issues in the life sciences. Medical ethics traces its roots to several early codes of ethics such as the ancient Greek Hippocratic Oath, which required physicians above all to “do no harm”; professional codes of ethics such as the one written by an English physician Thomas Percival in the 18th century that provided a foundation for the first code of ethics established in 1846; and the Nuremberg Code for research ethics on human subjects that was established during the war crime trials at the close of World War II in response to the gross abuses in human experimentation performed in Nazi Germany. The advent of new medical and reproductive technologies after the 1950s further complicated the moral and societal issues of medical research and practice. Many new questions of medical ethics have occurred as a result of developments in medicine. Most of the issues concern the rights of humans to control their bodies.
Clones are Coming 409 The cloning technology opens a Pandora’s box of ethical questions and has sparked a storm ofcontroversy around the world. In 1978 the birth of the first so-called test-tube baby was an important technological breakthrough. Not surprisingly, in vitro fertiliation has raised significant ethical questions, including some about the safety and access to the costly technique. Another issue involved is the right of parents to design their descendants. Medical ethics issues are also posed by conflicts between society and individuals. In most situations, medical ethicists are working to establish codes that balance the interests of society with the rights of individuals. New genetic technologies promise to make medical ethics an even more central part of social decision making. Medical ethicists are debating whether or not genetic information is the exclusive property of patients, or is instead the concern of society. Some have wondered about whether the manipulation of human cells through genetic engineering is somehow contrary to the laws of nature or religion; others have proposed that it will lead to the manipulation of human genes for eugenic purposes (improving the hereditary qualities of a race). This issue remains unresolved and continues to challenge medical ethicists in the 21st century. Those seeking new ways to have families saw remarkable new options take shape following the breakthrough in biotechnology in 1997. Ethicists worried that cloning would present the opportunity for families to replicate rather than reproduce, and that families with cloned children would thus not allow their children to have freedom to explore their own horizons. Others suggested that while cloning might be appropriate for some families, allowing cloning technology to be governed by the market seemed fundamentally unfair. Still other ethicists worried of the possibility that cloning technology might be used by tyrants or military forces to create engineered humans. Ethicists emerged who were willing to defend human cloning. It was argued that cloning is less morally problematic than families created by in-vitro fertilisation, because cloned children are at least products of their families’ DNA. Everyone feared that this technique might be used by someone irresponsibly, and doubts emerged about the ability of any country or the United Nations to police biotechnology.
410 The Best of Just English Should We Be Cloning Around? Read the following text and separate the arguments for cloning from those against it Cloning is merely a different way of making babies 4_________________________/ The possibilities of cloning are endless. Its goals and purposes range from making copies of those that have deceased to better engineering the offspring in humans and animals. Cloning could also directly offer a means of curing diseases or a technique that could extend means to acquiring new data for embryology and development of organisms as a whole. Cloning could also massively improve the agricultural industry. Scientists also ponder the idea of cloning endangered species to increase their population. They foresee the cloning of pigs that will produce organs that will not be rejected by humans. Cloning provides better research capabilities for finding cures to many diseases. There are possibilities that nuclear transfer could provide benefits to those who would like to have children. For instance, couples who are infertile, or have genetic disorders, could use cloning to produce a child. Equally important, women who are single could have a child using cloning instead of in-vitro fertilisation or artificial insemination. Nuclear transfer could also help children who need organ transplants to have a clone bom to donate organs. Cloning could also provide a copy of a child for a couple whose child died. The biggest problem with the use of cloning on a large scale is the decline in genetic diversity. If everyone has the same genetic material, what happens if we cannot clone any more? If a population of organisms has the same genetic information, then the disease could wipe out the entire population. Besides, the technique of nuclear transfer has not been properly developed yet. For instance, it took 277 tries to produce Dolly, and Roslin scientists produced many lambs with abnormalities. In 2003 sscientists issued a fresh warning about the dangers of cloning after new research found some animal clones died young. The possible negative long-term effects of cloning give cause for concern about attempts to clone humans. Other arguments for cloning involve taking nature into our own hands by cloning animals or people. When will we draw the line for getting involved in natural events? Religious organisations consider cloning to cause men to be rcproductively obsolete. This claim was deduced by the fact that cloning requires any cell, and a woman to develop in. They also
Clones are Coming 411 claim that cloning does not respect the fact that humans have souls. They consider cloning unnatural, and say we are taking the work of God into our own hands. There is a debate as to the moral rights of clones. Some say this will occur because there is no birth of newness. Clones will not be received with such excitement as a child of a couple who conceived naturally. They say cloning would deprive a person of uniqueness. People also wonder what mental and emotional problems would result if a clone found out that he or she was cloned. Did You Get It? I. Answer the questions. 1. Can you name the medical codes of ethics mentioned above? 2. What is meant by the ancient principle ‘do no harm’? 3. Why was the Nuremberg Code established? 4. What scientific developments complicated the moral issues of medical research? 5. What events of 1997 brought about new options for infertile couples? 6. Why do some ethicists consider cloning to be less morally problematic than in-vitro fertilisation? IL Fill in the gaps with the appropriate words and expressions from the box. Note that some words can be used more than once. for the sake of; morals; cater to; human development; offspring; genetic material; objection; consequences; morally right; valuable tool; in-vitro fertiliation; transplant On the positive side of the issue, cloning could be a__________________ for the studying of_____________________, genetically modifying embryos, and investigating new technologies. Using cloning to produce ______________for the sake of their organs is an issue that we must also face and question whether or not it is_________________. No one will say that it is okay to kill a human being their organs, but many have no ____________________to cloning thousands of individuals that look alike. Technology seems to take away many of the that we have
412 The Best of Just English worked so hard to install in society. Most people only seem to want to their own needs and do not bother to consider the that society and the clone may have to face. The issue of_____________________only leads the public to fear what may happen once cloning takes over, if it does. Many people believe that is more valuable than life itself. B. ethicists; ethics; thaw; siblings; concept; identical; society; frequently; possibility к______________________________________________________________________> The issue of what parents and the clones should do and feel comes up ______________________when we ask our questions about the_____of cloning. With the______________________________________________________of cloning their children, parents for example, can build a family of clones by storing____________identical to their child in a freezer and__________them out later when they decide to have another child. Although these children would be of different ages, they would look ___________to one another. This_____only increases the crazy effects that cloning can have on____________. What would one think if they were walking down the street and they saw a mother and her children walking side by side and they were__________looking just of different ages? Many maintain that parents have the right to do what they want, but others think that they should not take away any child’s chance at individuality. Just think, how would you explain the__________of cloning to your children, and what would their views about be? C. original; turn out; sneakers; view on life; rights; nurture; figure out; personality; identical; cool Environment plays a big part in determining how a clone may_______. For centuries, scientists have been trying to________which factors play the most important role in the development of the human_____________. Is it nature,, heredity, or environment? How will it feel to be one clone - among hundreds? Probably no worse than it feels to be the millionth 17-year-old dressed in___________baggy trousers, untied_____________and baseball cap - a feeling usually described as ‘______’. Imagine walking down the streets and seeing hundreds of people that are to
Clones are Coming 413 you but, just go by different names and dress differently. Cloning can be used to help certain individuals live, but what will be the cloned individuals’? Once cloning is done, the clone and its should have the same as any other people. Words, Words, Words... I. Explain the meaning of the following word-combinations and recall the context in which they were used in the Unit 1. to outweigh the risks 2. to avoid a trap 3. to trace roots 4. to do no harm 5. to provide a foundation 6. a gross abuse 7. to perform human experimentation 8. to design one’s descendants 9. social decision making 10. exclusive property 11. the manipulation of human genes 12. for eugenic purposes 13. to improve the hereditary qualities 14. to be governed by the market 15. engineered humans 16. to take shape 17. endangered species 18. to be reproductive!у obsolete 19. to be received with excitement 20. to deprive a person of uniqueness IL Find synonyms for the following words. • danger • flawed (adj) • benefit • vital • safety • to seek • remarkable • to emerge • goal • deceased • to foresee • to reject • appropriate
414 The Best of Just English III. Find antonyms for the following words. • to create • danger • appropriate • to complicate • gross • irresponsible IV. Consulting a dictionary, explain the difference in the meaning of the words in the following chains. Give examples illustrating their use. • to replace — to remove; • to banish — to destroy; • ancestors — forefathers — descendants — offspring — children — siblings; • tyrant — despot — dictator — tsar — chief; • to debate — to discuss — to argue — to reason; • to replicate — to reproduce; • race — nationality — ethnic group — class — caste. V. Match each word and expression on the left with the appropriate definition on the right. 1. to cultivate 2. to apply 3. to occur 4. developments in medicine 5. technological breakthrough 6. to pose a question 7. costly 8. to challenge 9. to police 10. on a large scale 11. a means of 12. to acquire a) to raise a question b) globally c) to invite; arouse a matter which attracts attention d) expensive e) to regulate, control, or keep in order by means of police f) to obtain g) instrument or method used to attain a goal h) to produce something and promote its growth or development i) to put to use j) a significant consequence or event in medical science k) a significant or sudden advance, development that removes a barrier to technological progress 1) to happen
Clones are Coming 415 VI. Fill in the gaps with the prepositions from the box and paraphrase the expressions in bold type. to; for; into; to; of; for; at; to <___________________________________________________________________________________________________> 1. The manipulation____human genes has a lot of potential dangers. 2. The question of who will have access the costly new technique is vital____the discussion of the future of cloning. 3. Most religious leaders claim that artificial creation of human beings is contrary______the laws of nature. 4. It is still doubtful if the application of the new technology is appropriate________eugenic purposes. 5. Proponents of cloning are excited the opportunity of taking nature their own hands. VII. Improve your translation skills by translating thefollowing passages in writing. Find the correspondences between the Russian and the English texts. A View on Cloning My view on cloning is that it could be ethical if the very first attempts succeeded. Otherwise, I would think twice about it because I fear that cloning could greatly reduce our genetic diversity. I believe if we were to interfere with this part of nature we would undoubtedly fail. In addition, mutations could occur. Those who are afraid of cloning Hitlers, or excited over cloning Einstein should calm down. I would say the time and the environment produced Hitler, not his DNA. So you do not need DNA from Hitler to produce a Hitler. I guess there are Hitlers already among us. Я полагаю, что реакция средств массо- вой информации на вопросы, связанные с клонированием, неадекватна. Те, кто го- ворит, что с помощью этой технологии будут производиться монстры-мутанты или солдаты, которыми легко манипули- ровать, далеки от истины. Как могут появиться мутанты, если ге- нетический материал оригинала и клона идентичен? Конечно, могут быть какие- то мутации, но они возможны и при обычном способе размножения. Мы просто не замечаем того, что среди нас живут тысячи клонов: это однояйцевые близнецы. И они не создают никаких проблем в обществе. Ясно видно, что внешне они очень похожи, но каждый из них — личность.
416 The Best of Just English The statement that the birth of a clone will bring no newness to nature is absurd. Anyone who would viciously declare that a clone is not new, and unnatural, would cause more problem to cloning then cloning itself. I mean a clone is living, it’s human. How can you be disgusted by another human just on the basis of how he/she has received its genetic information? Some scholars declare that human cloning wouldalter the very meaning of humanity. I think a clone would especially find the meaning of humanity and become unique. I think we strive to be unique because we are human and not because we have chromosomal DNA that is found nowhere else. Others argue that the random fusion of a couple’s genetic heritage gives enough distance to allow the child to be seen as a ‘separate other’. But, for example, I look exactly like my father when he was my age, though I am under the impression that I was done the natural way. Thus, I believe the old-fashioned way of having kids is not giving me enough distance. So, a natural kid like me already has the problem that a clone would have. Anyone who argues that cloning disregards the laws of God and the souls of humans, should reconsider their views. Cloning does not artificially produce copies of adult humans. The mental and emotional problems of clones would not be any different from those of any child bom by in-vitro fertilisation. I think if we were to use cloning it should be closely monitored as to what dangers are involved in having copies of people. Also, the ability to alter genes should only be used for improving quality of life, but not quality of the being! Нет никаких сомнений, что соци- альный статус “генетического двойни- ка” человека, если таковой когда-либо будет создан, ничем не будет отличать- ся от самого обычного человека. Ибо для его рождения необходима и яйцеклетка и ДНК, которые могут быть взяты толь- ко от конкретных доноров. Разумеется, при этом возникнут определенные воп- росы правового характера. Поставить вопрос о принципиально новом мораль- ном аспекте существования клонов - все равно, что обсуждать “моральные про- блемы” операции на сердце или удале- ния аппендикса. Другое дело, что могут найтись не очень профессиональные (или не очень чест- ные) ученые, которые могут попробовать использовать клонированиев целях раз- вития евгеники. Но такие попытки пред- принимались уже неоднократно и без всяких клонов. Что из этого вышло - об- щеизвестно. А то, что это чревато гено- цидом и другими далеко не высокомо- ральными действиями - то тут дело уже не в клонах и не в ДНК. Таким образом, что из ебя представляет “сенсационное” открытие? Только оче- редной шаг развития биологической на- уки, последствия которого вряд ли будут столь же велики, как раздутая вокруг него газетная шумиха.
Clones are Coming 417 Means of Discussion I. Study the phrases below which are used to express BELIEF and OPINION. Phrases for expressing BELIEF'. ' ' ' ..........- • I’m convinced we’ve met before, (very strong feeling that you’re right) • I’ve always held/maintained that watching TV is a waste of time, (used for very firm beliefs) • I feel she shouldn’t be forced to do the job. (strong personal opinion) • I reckon they’ll get married soon, (informal, usually an opinion about what is likely to happen / to be true) • I doubt we’ll ever see total world peace, (don’t believe) • I suspect a lot of people never even think about environment. (have a strong feeling about something negative) ,, Phrases for expressing OPINION*. • In my view / in my opinion / to my mind / If you ask me, we haven’t made any progress, (fairly informal) • From a teacher’s point of view, the new examinations are a disaster. Use these expressions in the sentences of your own, referring to the moral aspects of cloning. II. Using these expressions, fill in the gaps and make up at least 5 sentences of your own. • to believe in • to think of • in favour of • to be for or against • to have (no) doubt(s) about • (to have) views on
418 The Best of Just English 1. Do you God? 2. What are your_______divorce? 3. What do you the possibility of scientific research in this field? 4. I’m_______capital punishment. 5. Are you long prison sentences? 6.1 have this plan. Time to Talk I. In groups, discuss the following questions, employing the vocabulary of the Unit, as well as the phrases used for expressing BELIEF and OPINION. 1. Is human cloning scientifically ethical? 2. Why is it necessary to balance the interests of society with the rights of individuals? 3. Should genetic information be the property of society or individuals? 4. What kind of body can be created to control cloning at the international level? IL Study the following points of view obtained as a result of an opinion poll conducted in Moscow streets. Translate them into English and say if you share these opinions. МНЕНИЯ ОПРОШЕННЫХ НА ТЕМУ “КАК ВЫ ОТНО- СИТЕСЬ К КЛОНИРОВАНИЮ? ХОТЕЛИ БЫ ВЫ, ЧТОБЫ ОПЫТЫ ПО КЛОНИРОВАНИЮ ЧЕЛОВЕКА ПРОВОДИ- ЛИСЬ И В НАШЕЙ СТРАНЕ?” РАЗДЕЛИЛИСЬ ПРАКТИЧЕС- КИ ПОРОВНУ: • Мы не должны отставать от других стран. Это научный про- гресс. • Если посредством клонирования будет проведена селекция порядочных людей, то это ускорит выход России из генетического кризиса. А определить, кто порядочный, можно путем референдума. • Клонирование — научное открытие. Запретить его нельзя. Его судьбу должны решать ученые. • Науку нельзя остановить никакими силовыми средствами. В истории была масса таких примеров. Тот же автомобиль. В начале века у него было очень много противников. Сейчас нашу жизнь без него нельзя представить.
Clones are Coming 419 • Людям не страшно будет умирать. Если человек заболеет, он может сделать себе двойника. Нужна государственная сеть учрежде- ний, в которых будут проводиться подобные опыты только при тя- желых заболеваниях для замены органов. • Ежели запретят, богатенькие и власть имущие все равно будут делать, а нам, простым людям, ничего не достанется. • Захотел ребенка — сделал себе подобного: хоть голубого, хоть зеленого. Человек будет только внешне похож, а мозги будут все равно другие. • Ребенок и так наследует какие-то черты своих родителей. Что плохого, если малыш будет очень похож на маму или папу? А поче- му церковь вмешивается, не понимаю. Она ведь отделена от государ- ства. • Земля столько народу не прокормит! • Это может привести к демографической катастрофе или ис- чезновению настоящего человеческого генофонда. • Это — дьявольщина! • Нельзя клонировать душу человека. • Производство людей — это божий промысел. Он определяет, сколько мальчиков и девочек, сколько негодяев и хороших. Нельзя в это вмешиваться. • Нельзя искусственно создавать людей. А как же искра божья, которая дается любому человеку при рождении? • Это равнозначно испытаниям, которые проводили фашисты. • Хороших людей должно быть много! The opinion poll showed that men are mostly for cloning while women are against it. How can you explain this tendency? III. Comment on the following statements. 1. When cloning comes about, society profits will increase, and people will be willing to pay anything for a clone of themselves. Society will do all kinds of things for money. 2. Technology seems to take away many of the morals that we have worked so hard to install in society. Most people only seem to want to cater to their own needs and do not bother to consider the consequences. 3. “Why not make a few backup copies of the embryo and keep a few in the freezer in case Junior needs a new kidney...?” 4. Cloning from an already existing human will provide the opportunity for parents to pick their “ideal” child. They will be able to pick out every
420 The Best of Just English aspect of their child and make sure that it is perfect before they decide to have it. 5. A type of black market for embryos could easily develop someday. Soul versus Body Debate A. Study the following paragraph and express your opinion on the problem. The Church of Scotland has already stated that to clone human beings would be ethically unacceptable as a matter of principle. To replicate any human technologically is a violation of the basic dignity and uniqueness of each human being made in God’s image, of what God has given to that particular individual and no one else. This represents unacceptable human abuse, and a potential for exploitation which should be outlawed world-wide. B. Divide into two teams and give your arguments for and against when answering the following questions. • Is it possible to clone the soul and what will this mean? • In contrast, if a person is cloned, but not his soul, what will this mean? • Can a clone without a soul be destroyed without offending moral or religious beliefs? IV. Choose one of the statements below and write a short essay on the subject. 1. The cloning technology opens a Pandora’s box of ethical questions and has sparked a storm of controversy around the world. 2. The parents should not take away any child’s chance at individuality. 3. Human cloning is an extremely social matter, not a question of mere personal privacy. There are three dimensions to the moral question: the wholeness of life, the individuality of life, and the respect for life. 4. Why did the Vatican condemn the technology of cloning as being perverse and unscrupulous?
UNIT 4 THE CASE FOR CLONING: LEGAL ASPECT Terms of Discussion Before reading the texts, explain the following notions. • legal/illegal • moratorium • ban • to legalise • legal status • to enact legislation • to introduce legislation • scientific community Question Time Using your background knowledge, answer the following questions. 1. Do you think the law should regulate such issues as scientific research? 2. Can a ban on cloning research stop the scientific development in this area? Time for Reading What do You Do with a Genie out of the Bottle? It is impossible to reverse knowledge, but it is society’s prerogative to state which pieces of knowledge should remain unused — “can do” never implies “must do”. It would appear that many are attracted by the idea of human cloning, but maybe they have not fully understood the implications. Even supposing
422 The Best of Just English someone would try, there are many serious obstacles to be overcome. A scientist would take the risk of ostracism from a disapproving medical and scientific establishment, and know that a journal would possibly refuse to publish any paper on the subject. Then he or she would have to persuade or induce dozens of people to take part in prolonged illegal experiments. It would need donors, egg cell recipients and surrogate mothers in fairly large numbers, to take part in experiments. There are many reasons why what is scientifically possible is not always done. It is a commonplace that most active research scientists create far more potential research ideas than they have the time, people and money to pursue. If scientists succeed in cloning a human being, the human rights of the cloned baby must be protected. Even if the safety of cloning of human beings is established, this does not mean that the procedure should be allowed. The act of creating human beings with identical genetic structures through asexual reproduction could have major repercussions on the sanctity of human life and on our social order. Fears of such repercussions are the reason that many countries have passed legislation banning the cloning of human beings. To Ban or Not to Ban? EUROPE: In January 1998, officials of 19 European states signed an agreement outlawing human cloning. Countries signing were: Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Luxembourg, Moldova, Norway, Portugal, Romania, San Marino, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Macedonia and Turkey. “Nothing will be resolved by banning certain practices in one country if scientists and doctors can simply work on them elsewhere,” French President Jacques Chirac told a conference of Europe’s national ethics
Clones are Coming 423 committees. “It is only at the international level that we will be able to prohibit cloning and genetic manipulation that could alter the characteristics of the human race,” he said in opening the conference. Significantly, Britain was not among the 19 members of the 40- member Council of Europe which signed the anti-cloning agreement. The 1998 accord prohibited “any intervention seeking to create a human being genetically identical to another human being, whether living or dead.” It rules out any exception to the ban. The text, which became a part of the European Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine, allows the cloning of cells for research purposes. For CONTEMPORARY analysis of international legislation on cloning, see APPENDIX article “Запрет клонирования человека в европейском праве”. * * * THE U.S.: In 1997, within days of the published report on Dolly the sheep, the U.S. President instituted a ban on federal funding related to attempts to clone human beings. In addition, the President asked the National Bioethics Advisory Commission (NBAC) to address within ninety days the ethical and legal issues that surround the subject of cloning human beings. This provided a welcome opportunity for initiating a thoughtful analysis of the many dimensions of the issue, including a careful consideration of the potential risks and benefits. It also presented an occasion to review the legal status of cloning and the potential constitutional challenges that might be raised if new legislation were enacted to restrict the creation of a child through somatic cell nuclear transfer cloning. In 1998 in Illinois, a bill was introduced to make human cloning a felony punishable by up to three years in prison. The measure would also ban public funds for human cloning research. A Connecticut measure imposed a five-year sentence and a $5,000 fine. Most proposed bans on human cloning still left plenty of legal loopholes for scientific mavericks who wanted to make carbon copies of people. In February 2003 the U.S. House of Representatives overwhelmingly voted to ban all forms of human cloning roundly defeating a rival bill that would allow the use of cloning technology for medical research. The House passed a similar bill in 2001, but the Senate failed to pass any legislation on cloning. The Human Cloning Prohibition Act of 2003 was passed by a vote of 241 to 155 after several hours of debate. It would ban all human
424 The Best of Just English cloning, including cloning to create a pregnancy or for medical research. It also would make it a crime to “receive or import a cloned human embryo or any product derived from a cloned human embryo,” with fines of $ 1 million and 10 years in prison. This last provision troubled opponents, who feared that this “draconian legislation” could turn patients seeking treatments abroad that might result from embryonic stem cell research into criminals. But the U.S. President said he would veto anything less than a total ban on human cloning. The President stated that the vote in the House of Representatives had demonstrated concern for the profound moral and social issues posed by human cloning. He said, “We must advance the promise and cause of medical science, including through ethical stem cell research, yet we must do so in ways that respect human dignity and help build a culture of life. I urge the Senate to act quickly on legislation banning all human cloning.” Anti-cloning bills have support from Republicans and Democrats, as well as abortion-rights and anti-abortion backers. “We applaud the House for acting quickly to prevent what would be the creation of human embryo farms in America,” Family Research Council President Ken Connor said in a statement. The House defeated an amendment, sponsored by Pennsylvania Republican Jim Greenwood, Florida Democrat Peter Deutsch and others, that would outlaw cloning to make a baby but specifically encourage therapeutic cloning. At issue is the confusing and often emotional debate over whether a ball of cells created in a lab dish is a human life or merely human tissue. The scientific community and patient advocates say that while cloning does create an embryo, it has no chance of ever becoming a baby. The cluster of cells could be a source of embryonic stem cells—cells that have the potential to regenerate any tissue or any organ in the body. Religious and anti-abortion groups, and many politicians, argue that each cell cluster is a human life and should not be subjected to experimentation. A democracy is designed to facilitate a balance between competing interests, to achieve the maximum benefit for the maximum number of its citizens. The introduction of new technology challenges a democratic society to decide who gets what, when, where, and how much. The advent of cloning presents the inevitability of new and important social changes, and new issues concerning this power, and who controls it, are at hand.
Clones are Coming 425 Forbidden Fruit? Governments should make human cloning subject to the same regulatory demands as any other experimental science. Human-cloning research could take place, tightly controlled, and progress like other experimental procedures, with strictly enforced licenses for those who conduct research and harsh penalties for those who work without them. Embryos created in the course of human therapeutic cloning might also be studied to understand what happens, and what could go wrong, at the earliest stages of reproductive cloning. To ban all cloning research, therapeutic as well as reproductive is certainly a mistake. It scuppers the UN’s attempts to reach agreement on reproductive cloning alone. In any case, an indefinite ban on cloning research could have worse consequences than careful regulation. The goal of policy should be to ensure that research on cloning is conducted by those who know most about it, and about how to develop the technology, rather than by amateurs. Like with the war on drugs, bans will not cut off demand, they will boost it!!! The desperation of infertile or bereaved couples is as all- consuming as any craving for dope. The only hope of restraining this yearning will be to give such people hope, talking openly about the risks of cloning for mothers and babies, and explaining that the technology is advancing slowly but surely until it is safe. Only then may people wait, as they do for many experimental therapies, rather than turn to the renegades. Did You Know? Is human cloning banned because it is dangerous? In fact, cloning is safer than conventional reproduction, because the resulting offspring is known to have no significant hereditary birth defects. Government decisions are not necessarily correct. Remember that the U.S. government once banned interracial marriages, or the consumption of alcoholic beverages. People often call cloning “a dangerous new technology” and compare it to nuclear technology but it is hard to see how dropping a clone from a height of 30,000 ft can hurt anybody (except of course the clone)!
426 The Best of Just English Will humans be cloned to provide organs for transplant? It is preposterous to think that any human will not enjoy full legal rights merely because he or she was produced by cloning instead of sexual intercourse. Nobody will have any more right to seize a clones’ kidney than anybody else’s. However, there could be laboratories that can clone organs only —just a heart, for instance. Did You Get It? I. Answer the following questions. 1. What are the possible risks for a scientist who is involved in cloning research? 2. Why are things that are scientifically possible not always done in practice? 3. What agreement did the leading European states sign? 4. Did Great Britain join the treaty on cloning? 5. What are the signatories of the treaty? 6. What are the primary goals of the U.S. National Bioethics Advisory Commission? 7. What is the current U.S. legislation on human cloning? 8. Why are some U.S. legislators concerned about the possible loopholes in the proposed legislation? 9. What kind of regulations should be applied to human cloning? 10. Why is it considered to be a mistake to ban all cloning research? 11. What should be the goal of the cloning control policy? 12. Do you agree that bans can only boost the demand? Can you remember any examples from history to illustrate your point of view? II. Study the words and expressions in the box below and explain their meaning. Complete the following texts with these expressions, using them in the appropriate form. A. back street clinic, value systems, scientific community, ethical consideration, allow, professional principles, to pioneer legislation, ban, illegal, facilitate, treaty
Clones are Coming 427 In 1990s the UK making human cloning research , but currently it is allowed in the USA and several European countries with very different. Some form of international __________should be called for according to which no country would cloning research to be carried over from humans to animals. Realistically, there would be no way to stop a____________________or a dictatorship from ignoring such a treaty, but the lines need to be drawn. A second line of defence is also called for — the notion of the ethical scientist, for whom it would be against all to pursue such research. Some have argued that research should be permitted for the sake of transplant organs. This would require more careful___________, but the danger of a “slippery slope” to full human cloning would be looming over such an enterprise. Some legislators have sought to human cloning and cloning research. The has successfully lobbied for research freedom, claiming that cloning studies could coping with medical illnesses without ever having to actually create humans. B. Using the passage above as reference material, compare the European and the American attitudes towards the issue of the legalisation of cloning research. Words, Words, Words... I. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions and recall the context in which they were used in the Unit. 1. to imply/ to understand the implication 2. human perversity 3. to overcome an obstacle 4. the risk of imprisonment 5. to pursue an idea 6. to cause an uproar 7. to be perfected 8. to prepare legislation 9. felony 10. to impose a sentence/а fine 11. legal loopholes 12. maverick 13. to be voted down 14. to address legal issues
428 The Best of Just English 15. to be designed 16. competing interests 17. to achieve benefits 18. to challenge II. Fill in the gaps with the prepositions from the box and paraphrase the expressions in bold type. ,-------------------------------------------------------------------------, out, to, on, with, from, by, on 1. The desire to ban scientific progress is fuelled_____ignorance. 2. One of the participants of the competition was ruled when it was found out that he had been using drugs. 3. The decision of the Supreme Court is binding_________all inferior courts in the country. 4. He was barred________entering the race. 5. English pronunciation is very difficult to learn because there are many exceptions the rules. 6. It was so noisy in the classroom that it was impossible to carry the discussion. 7. To regulate this issue internationally all the countries involved should cooperate each other. III. Give synonyms for the following words. • to persuade • to prohibit • to predict • to establish • to tackle (a question) • thoughtful • to outlaw • to restrict • to emphasise • to obtain • to facilitate • to resolve (a problem) IV. Improve your translation skills by translating the following passage in writing, using the active vocabulary of the Unit. В России федеральный закон “О временном запрете на клони- рование человека” от 20 мая 2002 года ввел пятилетний запрет на клонирование человека, “исходя из принципов уважения человека, признания ценности личности, необходимости защиты прав и сво- бод человека и учитывая недостаточно изученные биологические и
Clones are Coming 429 социальные последствия клонирования человека”. В соответствии с этим законом “с учетом перспективы использования имеющихся и разрабатываемых технологий клонирования организмов предусмат- ривается возможность продления запрета на клонирование человека или его отмены по мере накопления научных знаний в данной обла- сти, определения моральных, социальных и этических норм при ис- пользовании технологий клонирования человека”. Однако вопросы о правовом регулировании хода научных изыс- каний в области клонирования должны решать специалисты. Только когда будут проведены все необходимые эксперименты на живот- ных, взвешены все “за” и “против”, окончательное решение должны принять ученые. Means of Discussion I. Study the phrases below which contain words and expressions used to talk about CONCESSION and CONTRAST: Concession Contrast • Although they were rich, they were very unhappy. • I acknowledge/accept that he has worked hard but it isn’t enough (accept is less formal than acknowledge) • I agree but I have strong doubts about it. • I admit I was wrong, but I still think we had a good chance to succeed. • I accept I’m guilty of what I’m accused of. Nevertheless, if I could I would do it again! • I concede that you are right about the goal, but not the method. • You shouldn’t seem so surprised. After all, I did wam you. • It’s all very well saying you love children, but who’ll provide forthem ifwet/ohave one? • Admittedly, she put a lot of effort in, but it was all wasted. • I thought the party would be boring. Quite the opposite, it turned out to be fun. • Everywhere in Europe they use metric measures. In contrast, Britain still uses non-metric ones. • On the one hand, it is impossible to reverse human knowledge; but on the other (hand), some scientific developments can result in disaster. • You are mistaken to think that we’ll do this work in a few days.On the contrary, it may take us a whole month! COLLOCATING PHRASES FOR CONTRAST • When it comes to politics, Bob and Julia are poles apart. • There’s a world of difference between being a clone and a naturally bom child. • There’s a great divide between the left and the right wings in politics. • A yawning gap divides criminals and law- abiding citizens. • There’s a huge discrepancy between his ideals and his actions.
430 The Best of Just English In class, work in pairs. Make up 5 statements on the topic of • students ’ rights • ways of learning English • love and marriage Let your partner contradict each of your statements. II. Study the phrases below which contain words and expressions used to talk about ADDITION (words for linking sentences/clauses): Adding words at the beginning of clauses/ sentences Adding words at the end of clauses/sentences Adding words in the middle of clauses/ sentences • You need a degree for this job. In addition, you need some experience. • In addition to his B.A. in Law he has a Ph.D. in Sociology. • Computers are becoming easier to use. Furthermore / Moreover / What’s more, they’re becoming cheaper. • It’ll take ages to get there and it’ll cost a fortune. Besides, we’ll have to change trains at least three times. • Children should respect their parents. Equally / Likewise, they should respect their teachers. • We’ll have all the stress of going to court and giving evidence. On top of (all) that we’ll have to pay the lawyers’ fees. • Apart from having a salary, he also has a private income. • Alongside her many other hobbies she is a good cook. • They sell software, hardware, spare parts, and so on. • The matter will go to the committee, then to the board, then to another committee,and so on and so forth, (suggests a long continuation) • The questions raised at the conference concerned the moral and legal aspects of long-term imprisonment, the rights of inmates, social rehabilitation programmes, etc. • He’s a good lecturer, as well as being a talented researcher. • This incident, along with other similar cases, led to an extensive debate in Parliament • The U.S. Constitution defines the powers of federal government, with all other powers and duties belonging to the states.
Clones are Coming 431 Now, using these expressions, think of at least 7 sentences of your own, referring to the legal aspects of cloning. Time to Talk I. In groups, discuss the following questions, employing the vocabulary of the Unit, as well as the phrases used for expressing CONCESSION and CONTRAST: 1 1. Who, if anyone, should own and control cloning technology and its products? 2. If the government refuses to support this research, would private businesses use it in their own interests? 3. Can/or should the scientific community regulate itself in the absence of governmental control? 4. Should some private organisation, independent of the scientific community, have this responsibility? 5. Should cloning research be restricted by the state or local governments, or some combination of these? 6. Can any type of legislation, at any level, aimed at restricting cloning research, be effectively enforced? 7. What does genetic engineering, and the cloning of human beings, mean for sociological and legal definitions of “individual”, “human”, and “citizenship”? 8. Should this technology be considered a form of ‘property’, and if so, should it be held by individuals or by the state? II. Study the following points of view obtained as a result of an opinion poll conducted in Moscow srreets. Translate them into English and say if you share these opinions. МНЕНИЯ ОПРОШЕННЫХ НА ТЕМУ “КАК ВЫ ОТНО- СИТЕСЬ К КЛОНИРОВАНИЮ? ХОТЕЛИ БЫ ВЫ, ЧТОБЫ ОПЫТЫ ПО КЛОНИРОВАНИЮ ЧЕЛОВЕКА ПРОВОДИ- ЛИСЬ И В НАШЕЙ СТРАНЕ?” РАЗДЕЛИЛИСЬ ПРАКТИЧЕС- КИ ПОРОВНУ: • Мир одинаковых людей — это апокалипсис. Для меня и моих детей это очень страшно. Должен быть запрет на клонирование на уровне ООН. • Клонирование — это уже состоявшийся научный факт и, как любое открытие, может быть использовано во вред и во благо. В 15 — 9099
432 The Best of Just English нашей стране исследования должны проходить, как и во всем мире, но под контролем в исследовательских центрах, которые должны получить разрешение. Давать или нет такое разрешение, должна ре- шать правительственная комиссия. • Это все равно выйдет из-под контроля. Хотелось бы мощную международную комиссию, которая провела бы этот опыт. На осно- вании выводов можно было бы действовать дальше. Указами это нельзя утихомирить. • Думается, прогресс нельзя остановить. Обнаружили эффект радиоактивности — со временем создали атомную бомбу. • История атомной бомбы, однако, — пример того, как научно- технический прогресс уничтожает своего создателя. • Это просто неприятно! Sum up the public attitude towards cloning in Russia, using the articles from the Appendix as reference material. Clones' Rights Debate III. A. Study the following text and express your opinion on the problem. Think About the Clone’s Interests, Urge Scientists The rights of the clone are in danger of being ignored in the debate about whether to clone humans. Brought into the world as a carbon copy of someone else who could be several decades older, deeply confused about the identity of his or her parents, the clone’s life would be a traumatic one. Yet the ethical debate, particularly in America, has instead considered the issue in terms of adults’ rights to have children in any way they choose. Cloners should consider the question: Is it good for the clone? It might not be in your interests to be a clone because you are taking the greatest genetic test ever imposed on people. In your parents, you will see what will happen to you biologically. As they go through life you will know that you will become bald at 40 and depressed at 50 and die of stomach cancer at 62. The clone involuntarily knows a lot more because he is going to have all this biological information thrust upon him. The focus has to be on the interests of the person made in this way. People may have the right to do what they want in the bedroom but when they have to use unusual means to make children then society has an interest in whether it is in the child’s interests to be cloned.
Clones are Coming 433 Another problem for clones would be in working out who their parents were. This has already proved to be an important question for children bom as a result of in-vitro fertilisation and who have begun long searches for their biological parents. A baby cloned from an adult would share that person’s parents, biologically speaking, but there would also be surrogate mothers and others to consider. Dr Ian Wilmut, of the Roslin Institute in Scotland, leader of the team that cloned Dolly the sheep, said “I have not heard of a reason for copying people that I find ethically acceptable. By contrast, there are some other techniques that I think deserve a lot of careful thought.” B. Prepare reports on behalf of the members of the National Bioethics Advisory Commission (or any other similar body you can think of) on the following issues. Be ready to argue each other’s views. • The legal identity of a clone. • Is society obliged to protect the interests of all children, irrespective of the way they were bom? • Who will be the parent of a clone? Fiction or Future?—Be a Detective! I. Read the story and try to guess where and when the action takes place. When One is Found Guilty by M. Stanley Bubien The bailiff stated, “All rise,” as the jurors entered. I stood beside the attorney and my brother. It reminded me of childhood — as things often did — when we played together — it was almost the same. Almost. Afterward, my brother had chosen a separate life, leaving me alone. Today, though, we were together — proof to the prayer of my loneliness, “The only way.” The guilty verdict was read. I slumped forward, but my brother cried, “No! I’m innocent.” “Stop this,” the judge yelled, “or I will find you in contempt.” “But it’s not fair”, my brother replied, “I didn’t kill anyone.” I wished I could explain, but that would keep us apart. I mumbled, “The only way.” 15*
434 The Best of Just English The judge pulled his glasses from his face. “By law — ” “The law is unjust,” my brother said. The judge wiped his eyes, and, to my surprise, addressed my brother evenly. “Yes,” he nodded and set his glasses aside. “I agree with you there. Legislation is meant to protect the innocent. And you certainly seem innocent.” My heart leapt into my mouth. He couldn’t ruin everything now! “But how can I tell? You are clones. Your faces, your fingerprints, even your DNA match exactly. That’s why when one is found guilty, all others...” The judge sighed, replaced his glasses, and banged the gavel. “I sentence you both to twenty years.” Together, the bailiff led us away. My brother’s head bowed in defeat, but I walked upright, for I would no longer be alone. IL Find out and tell the class what role each of the following persons plays in court. • bailiff • jurors • attorney • judge III. Find out the meaning of all the words from the text which are printed in bold type. IV. TRUE or FALSE? Find in the text the evidence supporting your opinion. Take advantage of the legal vocabulary. 1. The two main characters are clones. 2. They were on trial because each of them had committed a crime.
Clones are Coming 435 3. They hated each other. 4. Both of them were found guilty. 5. The judge was convinced that the verdict was fair. 6. One of the clone-brothers had committed the crime to have his revenge upon the other. 7. Their punishment was death penalty. 8. They were not to see each other again. V. In class, divide into small groups. Develop your own version of what had happened before the trial What kind of crime had been committed? What were the motives of the criminal? VI. In groups, think of the continuation of the story. VII. Imagine you are a lawyer. Give your opinion on the case and the legislation which was applied to it. VIII. Write a speech you would deliver at the trial if you were a) the defence attorney b) the prosecuting attorney.
UNIT 5 A STEP TOO FAR: OBSESSED WITH CLONING Terms of Discussion Before reading the texts, explain the following notions. • obsession • phobia/mania • madness • belief • ideology Question Time Using your background knowledge, answer the following questions. 1. Why do you think people get obsessed with a certain idea? 2. What are the examples of modem obsessions? Time for Reading Read the following texts and try to guess a) who wrote each of them b) whom they are addressed to
Clones are Coming 437 Americans for Cloning Elvis Bacteria, sheep, monkeys — all cloned! Some fear the possibilities. We urge you to seize them. Americans for Cloning Elvis requests your support. Make your view known around the world by signing our petition! Americans for Cloning Elvis strongly urges you to show your support for cloning Elvis by signing its petition. This is a crucial moment in the history of cloning! Americans for Cloning Elvis has learned of two people claiming to have samples suitable for cloning. One person has a wart and the other an eyelash. However, we are not associated with either person nor able to verify the validity of these claims. Several publications have featured Americans for Cloning Elvis, including The Los Angeles Times, Internet Underground and a major Dutch newspaper. Television and radio stations mentionecL4m£/ica«5 for Cloning Elvis throughout “Elvis Week.” There are over 1,600 supporters thus far. Your signature will make a vital difference. Americans for Cloning Elvis Petition We the undersigned, in our enduring love for Elvis, implore all those involved in cloning to hear our plea. One cell would allow future generations to witness his presence. The technology is here, and this petition is a testament to our will. Each day brings us closer to our goal! £.4
438 The Best of Just English Christians for Cloning Jesus Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth, and subdue it. (Genesis 1:28). Greetings, friends, we live in an imperfect world. A world full of sin. Everywhere you look you can see the effects of the devil; war, famine, poverty, violence, government corruption, pornography on television, the list goes on and on. Armageddon is surely on its way. The Second Coming of Christ is our only hope. Friends, we can’t sit back and wait for Jesus. He has given us the power to bring him to us. After all, God helps those who help themselves. Thanks to advances in science we can take DNA samples from the Shroud of Turin* and use them to clone the second coming! This is fantastic, but to stop here would be blasphemy. Friends, we should clone a Jesus for anyone who wants one. Any woman should be able to immaculately conceive Jesus. No more communicating with God through your pastor or priest. If you have a question for God you could just call home and ask him. Just imagine a world with a Jesus in every household! Tell your friends and neighbours about Jesus. No need to be greedy, they can have one too. Praise Jesus, the Lamb of God. Amen. £-4 * Shroud of Turin — Туринская Плащаница
Clones are Coming 439 More of You and Me Dear Sirs, I am writing to ask you a simple question, in the hope that there may be a simple response. The question is this: How is the creation of a sub-class of people justifiable in this day and age? I refer to the increased use of “clones” to perform the most menial tasks imaginable. Now we find clones washing floors, scrubbing toilets and doing the dumbest kinds of work in factories. We have entered the Brave New World we have always seen as fictional. Can’t we remember that ‘clones’ have personalities and feelings, and are capable of the same creative skills and imagination as the selected individuals who originally contributed their genes. It is becoming increasingly clear that those who use clones to fill the jobs nobody wants, or to fill other equally questionable gaps in the social structure, are the very people we should cast into the dustbin of history. Dear Friend! I am becoming more desperate with each passing day. My husband, who is far older than me, criticies me daily. He says that I am ‘salacious’ and a ‘hussy’ because of the way I dress and behave. Although I am the product of cloning operation — genetically taken from his first wife who died 19 years ago — I am also an individual. My husband, however, constantly compares me to his first wife. I was brought up by my husband who taught me most of what I know. I do love him and really want to please him, but I always end up feeling like an inferior version. Please tell me what I can do. Dear Science Community! Why should discrimination persist? Ethnic minorities have achieved success in their struggle for equality; women now feel able to compete with men in terms of social prestige; and even children now enjoy the same protection from discrimination as any average citizen. And yet we still read and hear the same old statement regarding the “clones in our midst”. I am a ‘clone’ — or rather I prefer to be referred to as ‘genetically enhanced’. I do not feel unnatural, and I refuse to be degraded by those who think of me as some kind of biological freak. As ‘clones’, I and my kind refuse to be bio-degradable.
440 The Best of Just English Dear Sirs, My wife and I always dreamt of having a large family. But when my daughter was bom with complications, the doctors told my wife she would never have children again, and my wife started to suffer from chronic depression. Then, one day, I read about your company in the local newspaper. I immediately called, and in less than a year little Bethany got a sister just like her, only two years younger. We are doubly happy because the doctors said this would never happen. Thank you for making our dream come true. I look forward to ordering Beth III as soon as we’ve paid off our loan for Beth II. Dear Sir or Madam, Although moderately successful as the owner of a small business, I knew I didn’t have much hope of being accepted by society because of my bulbous nose and extreme shortness. Neither I nor my wife (who has also suffered in the looks department) wanted to have children, because we knew they’d go through the same painful experience of being ridiculed in school, which we had had to endure. But then I heard about your company. I immediately made an appointment, and spent a delightful afternoon going through photographs of your catalogue. We finally agreed on Miss Italy ’88. Now, thanks to my beautiful daughter, my life is full of joy! Dear Editor, When my doggy Ben disappeared, I immediately suspected my mother-in- law. They hated each other, and Valerie, while pretending to be concerned about Ben’s disappearance, was acting strange. Then the police found Ben’s body, badly mutilated, and the detective told me that he had probably been stabbed with a small fruit knife. I asked Valerie what had happened to the silver paring knife we used to have. She never answered, but the police dismissed my claims after a perfunctory interrogation. Anyway, to forget our grief my husband and I decided to get another dog, and my husband suggested we clone Benny. I loved the idea. When Benny II appeared, our joy was even greater than the
Clones are Coming 441 first time. An added bonus is that Valerie became so distraught whenever she saw little Benny, she finally had a nervous breakdown and turned herself in. Now my husband and I are the happiest people in the world! Did You Get It? I. Explain the following Biblical words from the text about the cloning of Jesus. • Armageddon • Second Coming • blasphemy • Immaculate Conception • The Lamb of God IL In the following sentences, explain the meaning of the expressions in bold type. • How is the creation of a sub-class of people justifiable in this day and age? • .. .those who use clones to fill the jobs nobody wants are the very people we should cast into the dustbin of history. • ...but I always end up feeling like an inferior version. • I do not feel unnatural, and I refuse to be degraded by those who think of me as some kind of biological freak. • Neither I nor my wife (who has also suffered in the looks department) wanted to have children. • Women now feel able to compete with men in terms of social prestige. Words, Words, Words I. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions and recall the context in which they were used. 1. to strongly urge 2. to seize the possibilities 3. enduring love 4. to hear a plea 5. to sign a petition 6. to make a vital difference 7. to claim 8. to verify the validity of a claim 9. a sin 10. household
442 The Best of Just English 11. personality/individual 12. justifiable 13. creative skills 14. to persist 15. social prestige 16. to be degraded 17. to make a dream come true 18. to pay off a loan 19. to make an appointment 20. interrogation 21. to have a nervous breakdown 22. to turn oneself in IL Fill in the gaps with the prepositions from the box and paraphrase the expressions in bold type. about, with, to, of, to, with, to, through 1. It is rumoured that your friend Barry is associated Mafia. 2. At the end of term most students are concerned the final marks. 3. In this poem the author compares a woman a flower. 4. It seems sometimes that Paul is capable more than he pretends. 5. Nowadays women can successfolly compete______men in business activities. 6.1 am looking forward hearing from you. 7. After Mary had her first baby she thought she would never go this painful experience again. 8.1 refer her aggressive behaviour her being stressed out after her trip to France. III. Match the words on the left with their synonyms on the right. 1. mad 2. crucial 3. imperfect 4. to implore 5. to respond 6. dumb 7. to fear 8. fictional 9. questionable 10. delightfol 11. distraught a) upset b) crazy c) magnificent d) important e) doubtfol f) defective g) unreal h) to be afraid of i) to beg j) to answer k) stupid
Clones are Coming 443 IV. Give the opposites of the following words. • vital • to be accepted • inferior • desperate • creative • menial Means of Discussion CONVICTIONS and OBSESSIONS I. Put these adjectives describing people’s beliefs and views in the descending order— from fanatical to moderate. • fanatical/obsessive • eccentric/odd • middle-of-the-road/moderate • dedicated/committed • radical II. Consult a dictionary. Explain the meaning of the following words and give examples to illustrate their use. • open-minded • a traditionalist • dogmatic • narrow-minded • intellectual • conservative Now, using these words and expressions, think of at least 7 sentences of your own, referring to bizarre ideas about cloning. Time to Talk I. Read the following essay and render it into English. Do you share the author’s ideas? Я — перфекционист! Детей скоро можно будет делать на заказ, это факт. Все вариан- ты генокода человека запишут на диск и начнут продавать на рынке лет через пять или десять. Кто откажется заказать себе сына с фигурой Шварцнегера, а мозгами Эйнштейна? Или дочь с внешностью Мерилин Монро и чтоб
444 The Best of Just English пела как Монсеррат Кабалье, а считала быстро, как кассирша? Детей будут планировать в районной поликлинике за 562 рубля 40 копеек. “В кассу, пожалуйста...” В общем, генетически улучшенный чело- век — дело недалёкого будущего. И тут мы подходим к интересному вопросу: “Что будет, когда эти наши дети-гении подрастут?” А они подрастут быстро, потому что болеть перестанут. Ну зачем мне сына с аллергией планировать? Мне супер-акселерата, пожалуйста, чтоб месяца в три стал, например, веб-дизайнером и сам платил бы за свои памперсы. Вырастут такие детки и пойдут в жизнь, все поголовно гении. А нам, “диким”, незапрограммированным, тогда что делать — на свал- ку истории отправляться? Ну, нет! Я, например, на свалку не тороп- люсь. Я за своё место в жизни буду бороться. Я — перфекционист! Улучшаться буду постепенно, по мере возможностей. Сначала зубы заменю на титановые, самозатачивающиеся и, желательно, самочи- стящиесся. Потом зрение: близорукость можно, конечно, вылечить лазером, но стоит ли мелочиться? Вставлю видеоглаза с улучшенной оптикой, записью изображения и с прибором ночного видения. И чтоб перископические— с zoom-ом. А в лоб — лазерный третий глаз — для трёхмерного сканирования. Средства связи за ухо поставлю. Не таскать же всё время эти проклятые мобильники. Вся связь через Интернет, разумеется. Так дешевле и мультимедийнее. В руку я выд- вижные лезвия имплантирую, буду как X-man, а в синтетические мышцы мне зашьют боевые рефлексы ниндзя. Думаю, за “боевым чипом” придётся съездить на чёрный рынок. Внутренние органы буду заменять по мере выхода из строя, они как раз подешевеют. Лёгкие поставлю табакоустойчивые; печень — безболезненно превращаю- щую алкоголь в адреналин; вместо старых нервов — провода; сердце — из Швейцарии, чтоб работало как часы. А когда мозг износится совсем — “солью” свой разум в Интернет, ради интереса. Если не понравится, попрошу сына-вундеркинда нажать Ctrl+Alt+Delete! Думаете, я шучу? Отнюдь! Все перечисленные выше техноло- гии сейчас разрабатываются или уже разработаны. Будущее уже здесь. И я готов... II. Translate the following passage into English and express your opinion on this matter. Раздутая средствами массовой информации в сенсацию работа британских ученых на самом деле не столь значительна, и до ее за- вершения еще очень и очень далеко. Кто придумал достижение “био-
Clones are Coming 445 логического бессмертия” и “размножение посредством создания соб- ственных генетических двойников?” — Журналисты. Ибо ни один серьезный ученый пока не дает оптимистических прогнозов практи- ческого применения этого открытия. Кто придумал возможность со- здания генетической фабрики клонов и использования их с целью продажи донорских органов для трансплантации или для создания собственной маленькой армии? — Опять же журналисты. На самом деле, любой человек, хоть немного знакомый с проблемой, прекрас- но понимает, что теоретическая возможность далеко не всегда обес- печивает успех на практике. Role Play, "Clones Are Coming" Do you have a rich imagination? In class, organise a press-conference/ debate: “Clones are Coming”. Here is the list of participants and their roles: • Chairperson: Your job is to make a short introductory speech about what cloning is and what range of problems it involves; to give the floor to each participant of the press-conference who wants to talk; to keep order during the conference and sum up the results of the discussion. • Historian: Tell the audience about the history of cloning. (See Unit 2) • Clones: Imagine you were cloned, for a certain reason. Make up your story — a happy or a heart-breaking one and tell it to the audience sharing your happiness/problem. You are also supposed to ask the experts any questions about your legal or moral rights. • ‘Mad’ Scientists: Cloning is your creation! You know more about its dangers or advantages than anyone else. Your job will be to answer the audience’s/joumalists’ questions, giving the audience qualified advice and opinion. (See Unit 1) • Journalists: You are representatives of mass media, interested in cloning. You can address any participant of the conference with questions, in order to make a coverage of the problem for your newspapers/magazines/ TV programmes. • Members of the United Nations Organisation Committee on Clones’ Rights: You represent a recently formed Committee whose role is to protect the rights of clones at the international level. Tell the audience about the work of your committee, recalling a few specific cases of
446 The Best of Just English violations of clones’ rights you have dealt with, (for basic information see Unit 4, paying special attention to ‘Clones’ Rights Debate’) • Lawyer: Your task is to make a short review of the laws regulating human cloning and be able to explain their meaning to the audience. (See Unit 4) • Priest: Moral and religious aspects of cloning is what you are going to talk about. Make your speech emotional and convincing. (See Unit 3) • Businessman: You represent a business company which provides cloning services to anyone who needs them, on a commercial basis. (See Unit 6). Make sure all the participants of the conference have seen your company’s advertisements and be ready to talk about the advantages of commercial cloning.
UNIT 6 JUST FOR FUN: DOUBLE THE TROUBLE Any scientific advancement that stems from the result of Scottish people doing strange things to sheep is bound to have dire consequences. Welcome to CLONE-ALL®! DOUBLE THE TROUBLE LTD offers a service called “CLONE-ALL®” to provide assistance to would-be-parents who want to have a child cloned from one of them or from one of our celebrity cells. This service offers a fantastic opportunity to parents who were dumb or ugly to get a child that’s either a model or a rocket scientist. Or both! Don’t Sheep All Look Alike Anyway? The Honduras-Based Company plans to build a laboratory in a country where human cloning is not illegal and will offer its services to wealthy parents worldwide. CLONE-ALL® will contract existing mad scientists to try to perform the cloning. The company may also sponsor American laboratories that clone on the side. The cloning of the sheep Dolly in Scotland proved that the technology is now available to complete the operation successfully. A Clone of Your Own! CLONE-ALL® knows the hardship of conventional methods of having kids. As a famous person put it, “Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know what you’re gonna get”. Having a kid is like buying a car. You would first want to know that the model you choose works and is reputable. With CLONE-ALL®, the
448 The Best of Just English test-driving has been done for you. You can choose to have a clone of someone you know, or a clone of a famous person. Check out our specials below! Satisfaction Guaranteed! Due to unbelievable demand, CLONE-ALL® has introduced our basic clone package. Our mad scientists work overtime to breed the optimum in human workers. We can’t be beaten in this area. Order with your credit card and reserve your own clone over the phone! Our clones have a healthy balance of these three characteristics: • They’re hardworking — We’ve found the laziness chromosome. Our clones are missing it! • They can do specific tasks well — We can custom-design your clone for you. Want a garbage-man? Need someone to wash pets? We’ve got you covered. • They do what you tell them to — Our breakthrough technology enables us to give you the perfect clone. Tell your clone what you want done, and they’ll do it! No questions asked. What other qualities would you like your clone to have or miss? Celebrity Cellout Tell the class what you know about each celebrity mentioned in the advertisement. <______________________. Why settle for a regular person when you can have a star! We have secretly obtained cells of several celebrities. Choose from those listed below or thousands of others. Whether you’d like a Leonardo Di Caprio, Spice Girls, a Pamela Anderson, or a Sylvester Stallone, we’ve got you covered. Or, cross between two celebrities. Perhaps you want someone who looks like Cindy Crawford, but can make as much money as Bill Gates. Just let our mad scientists work for you. Satisfaction guaranteed. Serial Killer Cell Sale Clone three and get the fourth one free! Planning a raid? Forget your friends at the bar and get someone who really wants to get the job done. We’ve got classics like:
Clones are Coming 449 • Jack the Ripper • Ivan the Terrible • Count Dracula • Caligula Continue the list of famous villains suitable for cloning. Can you tell the story of each criminal? .... And many more... God’s Work, Man’s Hands We offer you a brand new service: our Home Cloning Kit! Get out a toothpick and get ready to clone around. Grab a cheek cell and throw it in our kit and get a fertilised egg, ready to go. Kit even includes an instructional video to walk you through each step. Ever been jealous of someone because they’re such a good person? Are you a parent who knows that if your son/daughter inherits any of your genes they’re really going to be a project to raise? Quit worrying and get The Grabber ™. With this handy little device, you can instantly snag a cell off anyone without them barely noticing you. Now you can have the child you’ve always wanted. Works perfectly with the Home Cloning Kit. You’re My Sunshine! A genetic engineering breakthrough! Our scientists have found out how to cross phosphorescent algae and humans together to get a glow-in-the-dark person. Never worry about a night-light again, your subject will literally shine! We can also cross people, plants, or animals interchangeably. We can do everything you saw in Spielberg’s “Star Wars Episode II. Attack of the Clones''' and more!
450 The Best of Just English How to Say NO!!! Protect Yourself from Being Cloned with CLONE-ALL®’s Exclusive Clone Insurance Package! Are you good-looking, smart, well-behaved, famous, or all 4 (we highly doubt anyone can be all 4 at a time)? Then there is danger that someone may be out to clone you! Here at CLONE-ALL®, we can insure that you won’t be cloned for a mere $99 (for up to $10,000) or just 1 per cent of what someone would pay to have you cloned! Just send us a cheek cell and we’ll put your DNA in our computer. If you purchase insurance from us, we’ll even throw in a FREE Stay Original Book\ The book deals with ways to prevent yourself from being cloned. In it you’ll find things like: • How to say no to strangers who ask for cheek cells • How to kiss without transferring DNA • How to tell when someone wants to clone you • How to make your home DNA-free • Plus tips on how to haggle the best price for your DNA if you do decide to sell your cells! Choose any point you like and write your own set of instructions on how to do it. PRICE LIST CLONE-ALL® makes your dreams come true for less! How can our prices be this low? By streamlining and computerising our production process we have cut our costs to the absolute minimum required for upholding our high standards of quality and service. All prices given in U.S. dollars. Laboratory Fee: The lab fee covers screening of the DNA sample, the duplication process, and the delivery of a complete embryo (including implantation in birther). Custom Cloning* $8,000 Designer Cloning** $5,000 * You MUST have written authorisation from the original, or his/her will if the original is deceased. ** Gene licensing fee (see below) is NOT included in the lab fee.
Clones are Coming 451 Designer Cloning Gene Licensing Fee We are constantly expanding our catalogue of licensing agreements with designer gene donors. Note that licensing fees are NOT required for Custom Cloning (such as yourself, family members, friends, etc.). Cindy Crawford $79,999 Michael Jordan $79,999 Pierce Brosnan $64,999 Nelson Mandela $6,999 Miss Greece ‘77 $1,499 Eddie Murphy $899 Marlboro Man $849 Julio Iglesias $599 JFK $499 Early Michael Jackson $299 Cell Extraction Fee Cell extraction is the process whereby samples are swabbed from the original to obtain the DNA to be cloned. NOT required for designer clones. Personal Extraction Pack* $299 Housecalls $3,499 * PEP consists of Do It Yourself Kit with instructions and a refrigerated container for sending the cell sample to our labs. Shipping, handling, and insurance included. Surrogation Fee / Implantation Prices include worldwide delivery. Note that, at CLONE-ALL® surrogation is payable only upon successful delivery of infant. Surrogation w/ U.S. passport $36,999 S urrogation w/ Co sta Ri can passport $10,995 Surrogation w/ Liberian passport $5,995 Surrogation w/ Chinese passport $8,495 Implantation (no surrogation) $2,199 Miscellaneous Backup embryo* Embryo storage Sex switch $1,500 (per month) $25 $199 * Special Offer! Sign up today and get a backup embryo absolutely FREE!
452 The Best of Just English Pets & Exotica Surrogation/Hatching are included in these prices. Cats $395 Dogs $879 Parrots $489 Pandas $9,499 Snakes Just buy another one! Livestock Embryos and implantation only for livestock (no surrogation). Minimum order two dozen head. Discounts available for multiple batches. Sheep $99 Cattle $299 Camels $2,499 Horses $8,999 Zebras $11,999 All prices are subject to change without notice. Money transfer fees, insurance, and local taxes are not included. Special surcharges may apply for unusual geographical locations and/or special physiological requirements of birther. Now that you’ve looked through the price list, make your choice! Say whose clone you’d like to have (if you had a chance) and explain your choice. Do you think the prices are reasonable? Would you like to expand the list by suggesting any other candidates?
Clones are Coming 453 ORDER FORM Ordering a clone has never been easier! With our new form, your application will leap straight into our production process. Refer to the Price List for details on prices. First, select preferred type of cloning: 1. Custom Cloning: Do you have donor’s written permission? a) Yes, I have a notarised affidavit b) Yes, I am cloning myself c) Yes, donor acceded in will d) No, but I will have it within 3 days. Select cell extraction method: a) Send me a Personal Extraction Pack b) Pay me a housecall. 2. Designer Cloning Select designer name here: • Julio Iglesias • Cindy Crawford • Michael Jackson • Pierce Brosnan • Nelson Mandela • Miss Greece ‘77 • Eddie Murphy • Marlboro Man • JFK • Early Michael Jackson Surrogation required? a) No, I’ll do the birthing myself b) Yes, with U.S. citizenship c) Yes, with Costa Rican citizenship d) Yes, with Liberian citizenship e) Yes, with Chinese citizenship Select gender of clone: a) Same as original b) Switch gender
454 The Best of Just English How are you going to pay us? a) Via account at Global Village Bank b) First Virtual c) Credit card (Visa/MasterCard/Diners/AmEx only) d) International Postal Money Order e) Direct cash delivery to our office Now we need your personal details: l.Name: 2 .Date of Birth:___I_________I__________(year/month/day) 3 .Phone:_________________________________________________ 4 . Addres s:____________________________________________ Lastly, we need you to agree to these statements: a) Yes, I realise I am purchasing the duplication of the genotype only, and am aware the clone may not resemble the original in behaviour, personality, and identity. b) Yes, I know that CLONE-ALL® is not responsible if the clone turns into a grossly overweight, anti-social, undisciplined slob. c) Yes, I hereby declare I will act as legal guardian for individual cloned as a result of this order. This form is for human reproductive cloning services only. Be sure to detail specifics to ensure rapid processing of your order. Clone-All® Guest Book If you were a customer, what questions would you add to this order form and what questions would you cross out? I am just thinking of the potential of this all. If I could have three clones of my husband for full time jobs; two additional copies to spend time with me, and, of course, a couple of my clones to watch the kids and another one to clean the house, and yet another one to handle all the financial and social obligations! Hmm... we’d be rich... I’d be very spoiled, and, of course, my kids would never be able to hide a thing from me. Sounds good... but of course then I’d have to share all of this with several other me’s ? Elaine Wilkinson, housewife
Clones are Coming 455 This is the best thing since sliced bread! I am saving all my money to get a clone of myself so that I can make him do all of my homework, and go to all of my classes. college student I’m quite surprised at the low price of the early Michael Jackson. Also, if I got a gender switch on Jackson, which one would he/she be? Mr Sedoff, University Professor I’ve just ordered myself again but I’m not so sure it is a good idea. I am fat, lazy and in need of glasses. When do you get a Claudia Schiffer clone? I’d be interested in that. Sharon Right, social worker I have been waiting for my clone for three weeks now, and I am ready to call the better business bureau if you do not deliver. Jill Heddon For the last few years our children have been bom uglier and uglier. The last one made us cry and the doctor was sick! You guys are our saviours. Jacques Lemiere, construction worker I am a 6 foot 2 inch blonde model, why don’t you clone me for free. Anna Koulikova, model Y our selection of females needs to be broadened to include more supermodels. Keep up the good work. Cloning rules the world! Alex Razamias, lecturer Unfortunately, my order for another me (I am wonderful, after all) has completely broken my poor piggy bank. I’ll no longer be able to pay my electricity bills! Alexander Canvas, musician
456 The Best of Just English Don’t play with nature, else it is never going to forgive you!!! Vlad Smirnoff, businessman Words, Words, Words... I. Explain the play on words in the following titles. • Double the Trouble LTD • Celebrity Cellout • Serial Killer Cell Sale II. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions and reproduce the context in which they were used. 1. to provide assistance 2. to offer a service 3. would-be parents 4. world-wide 5. to perform the cloning 6. to do something on the side 7. to complete an operation successfully 8. conventional methods 9. due to unbelievable demand 10. a clone package 11. to work overtime 12. to reserve something over the phone 13. to get somebody covered 14. satisfaction guaranteed 15. a serial killer 16. to get the job done 17. to quit worrying 18. a handy device III. Explain the difference between the following. • a celebrity • a model • a star IV. Examine the list of qualities given below. In your opinion, which of them are the most and the least attractive ones? • dumb • grossly overweight • good-looking • famous • anti-social • undisciplined
Clones are Coming 457 •ugly • smart • well-behaved • wealthy • reputable • hard-working V. In the text of the advertisements, find the English equivalents of the following words and expressions which can help you in talking about business. 1. партия товара 2. предлагать услуги 3. снизить цену 4. плата за услуги 5. крупная партия 6. поддерживать высокие стандарты качества 7. хранение товара 8. доставка 9. спрос/предложение 10. письменное разрешение 11. образец товара 12. страховка, застраховать 13. особые скидки 14. совершенно бесплатно 15. счет в банке 16. наличные деньги 17. предоставить фантастические возможности Time to Act! Using the materials of the Unit produce a set of funny advertisements for your own ‘business’. You may choose from the options given below or think of your own business company. • Rent-a-Pet Service. • A Bring-In Food Restaurant. • Real British Belly Dancing Class • Custom Made Love Letters — Any Style We hope you have realised by now that this is only humour! ®@©
GLOSSARY acculturation (n) — the process by which the culture of a particular society is instilled in a human being from infancy onward. ageing (n) — the process of growing old or maturing. artificial (adj) — made by human skill; produced by humans; not natural. ban (v) — to prohibit, forbid, or bar. Derived word: ban (n) bioethics (n) —the study of the ethical and moral implications of new biological discoveries and biomedical advances, as in the fields of genetic engineering and drug research. Derived words: bioethical (adj), bioethicist (n) biotechnology (n) — the application of the principles of engineering and technology to the life sciences; bioengineering. Derived words: biotechnical (adj), biotechnological (adj) breed (v) — to cause (plants or animals) to reproduce and usually to be improved by selection. Derived words: breed (n), breeding (n) cell (n) — a usually microscopic structure containing the basic structural unit of all organisms. chromosome (n) — a threadlike linear strand of DNA and associated proteins in the nucleus of animal and plant cells that carries the genes and functions in the transmission of hereditary information. Derived words: chromosomal (adj), chromosomic (adj) clone (Greek klon, twig) (v) — 1. to make multiple identical copies of an organism. 2. to reproduce or propagate asexually. 3. to produce a copy of, imitate. Derived words: clonal (adj), cloning (n), clone (n), cloner (n) cultivate (v) — to promote the growth of a biological culture, to nurture. Derived word: cultivation (n) deity (n) — a god or goddess.
Clones are Coming 459 descendant (n) — a person, an animal, or a plant whose descent can be traced to a particular individual or group; something derived from a prototype or earlier form. Derived word: descend (v) diverse (adj) — of various kinds or forms, multiform. Derived word: diversity (n) DNA (n) — deoxyribonucleic acid: an extremely long, double-stranded nucleic acid molecule that is the main constituent of the chromosome and that carries the genes. donate (v) — to give voluntarily, to contribute. Derived words: donor (n), donation (n) duplicate (v) — to make an exact copy of. Derived word: duplicate (n) egg (n) — a female gamete; an ovum. Also called egg cell. embryo (n) — an organism in the early stages of development in the womb or egg. Derived word: embryonic (adj) endangered species — plant and animal species that are in immediate danger of extinction. enhance (v) — to increase the value, attractiveness, or quality of; improve. Derived word: enhancement (n) environment (n) — the air, water, minerals, organisms, and all other external factors surrounding and affecting a given organism at any time. Derived word: environmental (adj) ethics (n) 1. a system or set of moral principles. 2. (used with a pl. v.) the rules of conduct recognized in respect to a particular class of human actions or governing a particular group, culture, etc.: medical ethics. 3. the branch of philosophy dealing with values relating to human conduct, with respect to the rightness and wrongness of actions and the goodness and badness of motives and ends. 4. moral principles, as of an individual. Derived words: ethical (adj), unethical (adj), ethically (adv) eugenics (n) — a science concerned with improving a breed or species, esp. the human species, by such means as influencing or encouraging reproduction by persons presumed to have desirable genetic traits. Derived word: eugenicist (n)
460 The Best of Just English facilitate (v) — to make easier or less difficult. felony (n) — a serious criminal offence fertility (n) — the ability to produce offspring, power of reproduction. Derived words: fertile (adj), infertile (adj), fertilize (v), infertility (n) fund (v) — to support financially. Derived words: funding (n) gene (n) — a hereditary unit that occupies a specific location on a chromosome and determines a particular characteristic in an organism. Derived words: genetic (adj), genetically (adv) gene pool—gene bank which provides a broad range of genes from which breeders can develop new varieties of organisms with desired characteristics. genetics (n)—the branch of biology that deals with the principles and mechanisms of heredity. genetic engineering— scientific alteration of the structure of genetic material in a living organism. genome (n) — a full set of chromosomes with all its genes; the total genetic constitution of a cell or organism. Derived word: genomic (adj) Hippocracic Oath — oath taken by physicians entering the practice of medicine in which they swear to follow the norms of medical ethics. identity (n) — 1. the condition of being oneself or itself, and not another. 2. the condition or character as to who a person or what a thing is. 3. the sense of self, providing sameness and continuity in personality over time. 4. exact likeness in nature or qualities. Derived word: identical (adj) identical twins — ones who originate by the division of a single fertilized egg. inherit (v) — to receive from one’s parents by genetic transmission. Derived words: inheritance (n), heredity (n), hereditary (adj) in-vitro fertilization — assisted reproductive technology in which eggs are fertilized outside a woman’s body. legal (adj) — permitted by law, lawful. Derived words: illegal (adj), legalize (v), legalization (n)
Clones are Coming 461 legislate (v) — to make laws. Derived words: legislation (n), legislator (n), legislative (adj), legislature (n) lifespan (n) — the average or maximum length of time an organism, a material, or an object can be expected to survive or last. mania (n) — an excessive desire for something. Derived words: maniac (n), (adj) maverick (n) — one that refuses to abide by the dictates of or resists adherence to a group; a dissenter. megalomania(n) — 1. a psychopathological condition in which delusional fantasies of wealth, power, or omnipotence predominate. 2. an obsession with grandiose or extravagant things or actions. metaphysics (n) — the branch of philosophy that examines the nature of reality, including the relationship between mind and matter, substance and attribute, fact and value. Derived word: metaphysical (adj) morals (n)—principles, standards, or habits with respect to right or wrong conduct morality (n) — conformity to the rules of right conduct; moral or virtuous conduct. moratorium (n) — a legally authorized period of delay or waiting. multiply (v) — to make many or manifold; increase the number, quantity, etc., of something. Derived word: multiplicity (n) mutation (n) — a sudden departure from the parent type in one or more heritable characteristics, caused by a change in a gene or a chromosome. Derived word: mutant (n) nurture (v) — 1. to feed and protect or support and encourage. 2. to bring up; train; educate. (n) upbringing; training; education. Derived word: nurturer (n) obsess (v) — to dominate or excessively preoccupy the thoughts, feelings, or desires of; haunt. Derived words: obsession (n), obsessive (adj), obsessed (adj). offspring (n) — 1. children of a particular parent; descendants; progeny. 2. a child or animal in relation to its parent or parents.
462 The Best of Just English personality (n) — 1. distinctive qualities of a person, especially those distinguishing personal characteristics that make one socially appealing. 2. a person as the embodiment of distinctive traits of mind and behaviour. phobia (n) — a persistent, irrational fear of a specific object, activity, or situation. Derived word phobic (adj) prodigy (n) — a person, esp. a child or young person, having extraordinary talent or ability. reproduce (v) — (biology) to generate (offspring) by sexual or asexual means. Derived words: reproduction (n), reproductive (adj) sociobiology (n) — the study of the biological determinants of social behaviour, based on the theory that such behaviour is often genetically transmitted and subject to evolutionary processes. Derived words: sociobiological (adj), sociobiologist (n) superior (adj) — 1. higher in station, rank, degree, etc. 2. above the average in excellence, merit, intelligence, etc. 3. of higher grade or quality. 4. higher in place or position. Derived word: superior (n) surrogate/substitute mother — a woman who is paid to bear a child for another woman, either through artificial insemination by the other woman’s husband, or by carrying until birth the other woman’s surgically implanted fertilized egg- test-tube baby — a baby developed from an egg that was fertilized outside the body and then implanted in the uterus of the biological or surrogate mother. tissue (n) — (biology) an aggregation of morphologically similar cells and associated intercellular matter acting together to perform one or more specific functions in the body. There are four basic types of tissue: muscle, nerve, epidermal, and connective. transplant (v) — to transfer (an organ, tissue, etc.) from one part of the body to another or from one person or animal to another. Derived words: transplant (n), transplantation (n)
APPENDIX Here are some Russian articles covering the issue of cloning. Make use of these supplementary materials while studying the Units of the book. These articles can be usedfor rendering into English, translation, classroom report presentation and discussion. * * * FOR UNITS 1—3 Как одна овца весь мир раздвоила Призрак бродит по планете, призрак кло- нирования человека. Для борьбы с ним объединяются Папа Римский и президент США, глава англиканской церкви и пре- зидент Франции, светила науки и рели- гии. 19 европейских государств заклей- мили клонирование, увидев в нем черты апокалипсиса. В тот самый момент, когда овечка Долли проблеяла свое первое “мээ” (1996), на- чался отсчет эпохи клонирования. В ян- варе 1998 года биофизик Ричард Сид объ- явил, что он намеревается открыть в Чи- каго первую в мире коммерческую кли- нику по клонированию людей и уже за- получил четырех клиентов, готовых подвергнуть себя экспериментам. Итак, призрак клонирования обрел плоть и кровь в лице доктора Сида, который внешне весьма смахивает на ветхозавет- ных пророков. Впрочем, СМИ предпо- читают сравнивать его с доктором Фран- кенштейном. Американцы создали атомную бомбу, оп- равдываясь тем, что первым ее мог запо- лучить Гитлер. Советский Союз создал свою атомную бомбу, объясняя это тем, что не должна существовать монополия на ядерное оружие. Но что если в Вашин- гтоне узнают, что клонированием занял- ся, скажем, Саддам Хусейн? Будет ли тогда создан “Манхэттенский проект” по клонированию? И не станет ли сегодняш- няя анафема — доктор Сид -— всеми по- читаемым “отцом клонирования”, как ко- гда-то “отец водородной бомбы” Эдвард Теллер? И как посмотрит на это подо- зрительная Москва? [..] Но дело, конечно, не в том, кто такой доктор Ричард Сид — святой или греш- ник, спаситель или Ирод рода человечес- кого. Дело в том, допустимо ли клониро- вание человека? Основные возражения против клонирования homo sapiens но- сят религиозно-этический характер. Но религия выступала почти против всех фундаментальных открытий науки. Дос- таточно вспомнить костры инквизиции, имена Коперника, Галилея, Джордано Бруно... С этикой дело обстоит несколько слож- нее. Бог один, а вот этических пророков хоть отбавляй. Сколько людей, столько и этических взглядов. 16 — 9099
464 The Best of Just English Возможность клонирования человека взбудоражила нас потому, что постави- ла коварный вопрос — кто мы? В своем интервью Национальному общественно- му радио доктор Сид сказал: “Бог создал человека по своему образу и подобию. Бог хотел, чтобы человек и он стали еди- ны. Клонирование — первый серьезный шаг навстречу этому единению. Человек овладеет наукой и техникой бессмертия”. В этом утверждении — повод для беско- нечных теологических и этических спо- ров. Но до Бога по-прежнему далеко, не дотянуться, а клонирование все-таки бу- дет проходить на нашей грешной земле. Блага, которые сулит клонирование че- ловечеству, неисчислимы. Научный мир нехотя, с опаской, но признает это. Но и угроза, связанная с клонированием, ве- лика. Здесь вновь напрашивается анало- гия с расщепленным атомом. Его осво- божденная энергия способна уничтожить всю планету и одновременно облагоде- тельствовать ее. То же самое может сде- лать “расщепленный ген”. И атом, и ген — лишь орудия в руках человека. Они вне религии и этики. Сид утверждает, что общественное недоверие мгновенно ис- парится “при виде нескольких здоровых, веселых, улыбающихся клонированных малюток”. Ну а при виде нескольких уг- рюмых клонированных монстров? Пре- давая анафеме доктора Сида, мы, сами того не ощущая, выражаем вотум недо- верия человеческому разуму. Но неуже- ли зарезать овцу лучше, чем клониро- вать? Мэлор Стуруа Московский Комсомолец, 23 января 1998 г. FOR UNIT 2 "Чикагского безумца" обложили со всех сторон В Париже на Европейской конференции национальных комитетов по биоэтике представлен к подписанию Протокол о запрете клонирования человека. Предпо- лагается, что его подпишут 19 из 40 чле- нов Совета Европы. Многие из них приняли окончательное решение после громкого заявления чи- кагского ученого Ричарда Сида о своих планах открыть клинику для клонирова- ния людей. Хотя появление овечки Долли еще до этого заявления привело к созданию сра- зу нескольких фирм, предлагающих сво- им потенциальным клиентам прелести человеческого клонирования. Так, в сети Интернет есть Clone-AIF, которая, яко- бы на основе собственных тридцатилет- них исследований, может создавать кло- ны с различными физиологическими ха- рактеристиками, позаимствованными у фотомоделей и кинозвезд. Похожую фир- му — ClonAid-— создал некто Рэл, осно- ватель религиозной секты, считающий, что мы произошли от инопланетян, при- чем не как-нибудь, а именно путем кло- нирования. Ричард Сид, таким образом, попал в ком- панию людей, не вызывающих доверия. И по всей видимости, к его заявлению
Clones are Coming 465 мир отнесся бы примерно так же, как и к рекламным буклетам упомянутых фирм, если бы не его явная принадлежность к научному сословию. 69-летний ученый имеет докторскую сте- пень по физике, полученную в Гарварде; за его плечами много лет работы в каче- стве специалиста по лечению бесплодия. Но именно научное сообщество и нанес- ло ему главный “ответный удар”. Мариан Дэймвуд, специалист по беспло- дию из Балтимора и одновременно член совета Американского общества репро- дуктивной медицины (ASRM), сказала, что вряд ли найдется хотя бы один ме- дик, который согласился бы сотрудни- чать с Сидом в таком проекте и в такое время. Одновременно ASRM объявило о добровольном пятилетием моратории на любые эксперименты, связанные с кло- нированием людей. Любой из членов ASRM, нарушивших этот мораторий, по- теряет право представлять свои резуль- таты на научных конференциях и публи- коваться в научных журналах. Сразу в не- скольких штатах начаты законодатель- ные процедуры по запрету клонирования людей. Если соответствующие законы будут приняты, то экспериментаторам, подобным Сиду, грозит шестилетнее тю- ремное заключение. Комментируют: Профессор Борис ЛЕОНОВ, руководи- тель лаборатории в Центре акушерства и гинекологии РАМН, “автор” перво- го в России “ребенка из пробирки”: По моему мнению, ни в коем случае нель- зя запрещать клонирование животных, клонировать человека тоже можно, а в некоторых случаях — даже нужно, для лечения бесплодия и некоторых генети- ческих заболеваний. Естественно, его нужно проводить под строгим контролем и в соответствии с определенными нор- мами. Профессор Андрей ДЫБ АН, ведущий научный сотрудник Института экспе- риментальной медицины, проработав- ший 5 лет в Центре репродуктивной генетики в Чикаго: ... Что касается технической стороны вопроса, то я, как специалист, даже гово- рить об этом не могу серьезно. У Вилму- та было стадо овец, и он провел почти 300 экспериментов, из которых только два оказались успешными. В случае кло- нирования человека нужно было бы “зап- ланировать” такое же большое количе- ство мертворожденных или уродливых детей. Все это нельзя воспринимать как реальность. Елена Кокурина и Владимир Покровский Общая газета, Москва 15 января 1998 г. FOR UNITS 1—3 Дня чего клонировать человека? Клонирование человека уже сейчас очень близко к реальности. К сожалению, на обсуждение темы клонирования с само- го начала повлияли СМИ, часто вводя- щие общественность в заблуждение. При разумном регулировании этого процесса преимущества клонирования людей су- щественно перевесили бы недостатки. [6-
466 The Best of Just English Если общественность наложит полный запрет на клонирование человека, это окажется печальным эпизодом в челове- ческой истории. Многие спрашивают: “Для чего клони- ровать человека”? Существует как мини- мум две веские причины: чтобы предос- тавить возможность семьям зачать детей- близнецов выдающихся личностей и что- бы позволить бездетным парам иметь де- тей. Живя в свободном обществе, мы также должны задаться вопросом: “Дей- ствительно ли отрицательные последст- вия настолько неизбежны, что следует запретить это делать взрослым людям?” В целом отрицательные последствия не так уж непреодолимы. Там, где предви- дятся определенные злоупотребления, они могут быть предотвращены с помо- щью узконаправленных законов и регу- лирующих норм. Что же мы можем ожидать от человече- ских клонов? Ответ вытекает из изуче- ния обычных однояйцевых близнецов. По внешности клон полностью повторя- ет оригинального индивида, имеет прак- тически тот же рост и телосложение. Од- нояйцевые близнецы имеют 70-процен- тную корреляцию в интеллекте и 50-про- центную корреляцию в чертах характе- ра. Это означает, что если клонировать выдающегося ученого, то его клон-близ- нец может на самом деле оказаться еще умнее, чем исходный ученый! А если клон Элизабет Тейлор будет иметь не- сколько другой характер, разве это име- ет значение? В настоящее время мы не можем с уве- ренностью сказать, какой процент близ- нецов выдающихся людей будет делать равные по значимости вклады в науку. Однако если запретить клонирование, мы никогда этого не узнаем. Здесь и далее приведены выдержки из статьи “The Case for Cloning Humans ’’ by Steven Vere April 17, 2001 FOR UNITS 2,3 Пока ученые спорят, Голливуд вовсю клонирует Голливуд всегда пристально интересо- вался новейшими научными открытия- ми, используя их в качестве сюжетного материала. Но если серьезные исследо- ватели скованы цепями формул и резуль- татами экспериментов, то кинематогра- фисты абсолютно свободны в интерпре- тации научных достижений, прогнозиро- вании открытий и их последствий. Но- вое, что привлекло продюсеров в мире науки, — скандально популярная тема клонирования. Эту тему с жадностью подхватили в Гол- ливуде, дав волю своей фантазии. На зри- теля обрушилась настоящая информаци- онная атака как с малого экрана, так и с большого. В первом случае речь идет о суперизвестном, успевшем стать культо- вым телесериале компании “Фокс” — “Секретные материалы” (“X-FILES”), где в популярной форме излагаются не толь- ко ставшие классическими научные тео- рии, но и те, к которым ученые только- только подступаются. Центральное место в развитии сюжета “X-FILES” занимает тема клонирования. Создатель сериала Крис Картер предла- гает довольно пессимистическую карта-
Clones are Coming 467 ну: американское правительство задума- ло заменить несовершенный человечес- кий род, для чего проводит многолетний тайный эксперимент. В сверхзасекречек- ном районе одного из штатов содержит- ся целое поселение клонов — серийный вид совершенных людей без физических и нравственных недостатков, идеальных и послушных функционеров, работаю- щих лишь в заданном ритме. У этих по- корных “солдат” нет прошлого, а значит, нет и воспоминаний. Они не испытыва- ют потребности в любви и ни к чему не стремятся. На поле, в лаборатории, в ма- газине всюду мы видим абсолютно оди- наковых людей — дюжину, тысячу, мил- лион “близнецов”, лишенных индивиду- альности. “Потерять свое настоящее ли- цо, превратиться в армию неисчислимых песчинок-людей — не есть ли это страш- ное будущее человечества?” — спраши- вают создатели сериала. На большом экране с подобными фило- софскими кроссвордами сталкиваются герои картины “Гаттака” — одного из лидеров проката США. В этой антиуто- пии человечество состоит из клонов, а рожденных естественным путем людей считают “выродками” и преследуют. [... ] А может быть, стоит оптимистически от- нестись к работе ученых в этой области? Теряя любимых, мы не можем смирить- ся с мыслью, что больше никогда не уви- дим их. Мы готовы на все, лишь бы вер- нуть хотя бы мгновение прошлого, уви- деть дорогое лицо, прижаться щекой к любимому плечу, сказать то, что не ус- пели... Помогут ли эксперименты по клониро- ванию сделать людей более счастливы- ми, а любовь — действительно бессмер- тной? Юлия Козлова Московский Комсомолец 23 января 1998 г. FOR UNIT 2 Премьера клона состоится? Недавно на российском телевидении по- казали один из главных боевиков про- шлого киносезона — фильм с Арноль- дом Шварцнеггером “Шестой день”. В этом фильме речь идет о клонировании человека и о том, почему этого нельзя допустить. Раз уж речь идет о Голливуде, стоит вспомнить, в чем главные аргументы — и художественные, и документальные — противников клонирования. Во-первых, это прерогатива Бога — создавать чело- века. Во-вторых, клонирование — это падение цены человеческой жизни и воз- врат к антигуманным временам. В-тре- тьих, это безграничная власть медици- ны — может нарушиться весь существу- ющий баланс в природе. У сторонников клонирования человека и его органов главный довод — нельзя остановить про- гресс, главной целью которого является помощь человеку. Клонирование человека запрещено не- сколькими мировыми политическими ин- ститутами и законодательством многих стран. Причиной таких решений стали как общие рассуждения на тему вечнос- ти, так и конкретные неудачные опыты
468 The Best of Just English над животными. Клонированная овечка Долли оказалась тяжело больна и ее уже нет на свете. Однако вести о попытках клонирования появляются почти ежедневно. Часто они носят откровенно рекламный характер. Возможно, и к последней новости стоит отнестись не так уж серьезно; итальянс- кий хирург Северино Антинори объявил о рождении клонированного ребенка. По его словам, клонов на свет произведут три женщины, чье имена не разглашают- ся в целях обеспечения секретности “про- екта”. Имя Северино Антинори стало из- вестно мировой медицине в 1994 году, когда он помог родить 62-летней жен- щине, которая уже в силу возраста и фи- зиологических особенностей поставила на себе крест. Обсуждать тему клонирования очень ин- тересно, и скандальное заявление италь- янского хирурга подбросило охапку ве- ток в костер дискуссии. Так что Голли- вуд может писать новые сценарии на тему клонирования —общественный интерес к этой теме не пропадает. А что начнет- ся, когда клонированные дети появятся на свет — уму не постижимо... Нина Зверева www.politcom.ru 27 ноября 2001 г. FOR UNIT 5 Американки хотят клонировать Брэда Питта Клонирование человека — сейчас тема модная. И совершенно очевидно, что кло- нировать нужно не абы кого, а самых достойных. Вот американцы и провели опрос, из которого сразу стало ясно, что первым в очереди на клонирование сто- ит Брэд Питт (который уступает по по- пулярности только крем-брюле, но крем- брюле и так каждый день “клонируется” на фабриках мороженого). На втором месте — лучший Терминатор всех вре- мен и народов Арнольд Шварценеггер. Самой желанной для клонирования жен- щиной является Дженнифер Лопес. А вот Бритни Спирс всего лишь замыкает де- сятку. На пятом месте — Кэтрин Зета- Джонс. Также в списке кандидатов на клонирование и бывшая “золотая пароч- ка” Голливуда — Круз и Кидман. Прав- да, Том на 11-ом месте, а Николь всего лишь на 18-ом. Омен.ру февраль 2003 г. FOR UNIT 3 Клинт Иствуд, Артур Кларк идддюшка Макс Для того, чтобы клонировать человека, существует как минимум две веские при- чины: чтобы предоставить возможность семьям зачать детей-близнецов выдаю- щихся личностей и чтобы позволить без- детным парам иметь детей.
Clones are Coming 469 Рассмотрим первый случай — клониро- вание исключительных личностей. Вы- дающиеся люди ценны во многих отно- шениях, как культурных, так и финансо- вых. В США кинозвезды и звезды спорта часто “стоят” сотни миллионов долларов. Клинт Иствуд, например. Его фильмы за тридцать лет принесли несколько мил- лиардов долларов. Сегодня ему под семь- десят, и он приближается к завершению своей актерской и режиссерской карье- ры. Культурное и экономическое значе- ние клонирования Клинта Иствуда было бы громадным. Десятки миллионов по- клонников были бы в восторге. К тому же, он, несомненно, имеет финансовые ресурсы, чтобы оплатить эту процедуру. Его новая жена сейчас в детородном воз- расте и смогла бы легко выносить и ро- дить ребенка, который воспитывался бы в их семье. Если бы семья Иствудов ре- шила, что они хотят это сделать, почему правительство должно это запретить? По- чему это должно быть преступлением? Почему не следует разрешать клониро- вание выдающихся представителей ин- теллигенции и ученых, таких как науч- ного фантаста-провидца Артура С. Клар- ка, д-ра Джонаса Салька, изобретателя полиомиелитной вакцины, и даже само- го д-ра Яна Вилмута? Стоило бы клони- ровать каждого из Нобелевских лауреа- тов ради того будущего вклада, который их близнецы могли бы потенциально вне- сти в науку. Речь идет о решении, кото- рое принимается непосредственно заин- тере-сованными индивидами: донором ДНК, женщиной, которая будет вынаши- вать ребенка, и ее мужем, который будет помогать растить этого ребенка. Понятие исключительных людей не ог- раничивается кинозвездами и лауреата- ми Нобелевской премии. Всем нам изве- стны люди, которых мы уважаем и кото- рыми восхищаемся. Иногда мы говорим себе: “Побольше бы в мире таких людей, как этот!” Клонирование людей позво- ляет нам пойти дальше пустых размыш- лений подобного рода. Предположим, старый дядюшка Макс — прекрасный человек, к которому с любовью и уваже- нием относятся в обществе и в семье. Его племянница со своим мужем решают, что они бы хотели иметь ребенка, такого же, как дядюшка Макс. Он польщен и согла- сился позволить себя клонировать. По- чему же Конгресс США в своей “беско- нечной мудрости” должен вмешиваться и объявлять дядюшку Макса и его пле- мянницу преступниками, которых следу- ет арестовать полиции по делам воспро- изводства населения и посадить в тюрь- му? Где же тут вредные последствия для них самих и для общества? Почему это должно быть преступлением? "The Case for Cloning Humans " by Steven Vere April 17, 2001 FOR UNITS Сенсации года: все открытия на грани дозволенного По мнению профессора Оксфордского университета Эндрю Линзи, некоторые опыты английских ученых нельзя рас- сматривать иначе как научный фашизм. Клонированная овца Долли и безголовая лягушка — первый этап работ по выра-
470 The Best of Just English щиванию людей-доноров человеческих органов. Блокирование гена, отвечающе- го за развитие мозга, сделало возможным рождение людей без мозга. Мы создаем человеческие существа, смысл жизни ко- торых сводится исключительно к обслу- живанию доминирующей группы. С мо- ральной точки зрения, это шаг назад — создавать мутантную форму жизни. Беспокойство профессора Линзи разде- ляет доктор Патрик Диксон, автор зна- менитой книги “Генетическая револю- ция”. Он призвал провести международ- ную встречу на высшем уровне для зап- рещения безнравственных опытов. Если это не сделать сейчас, то скоро мы уви- дим нарождение человеческих мутантов, которые будут существовать, формаль- но считаясь мертвыми, так как у них нет мозга. Таких гуманоидов могут быть сде- ланы сотни. Они будут жить с нами, но тот ли это мир, в котором захотим жить мы? Опыты проводятся под покровом стро- [ жайшей тайны. Создатель клонирован- ной овцы доктор Вилмут объясняет се- кретность коммерческими интересами. Генные технологии обещают прибыли в десятки миллионов долларов. Другой из- вестный эмбриолог признался, что избе- гает огласки своих медицинских опытов, так как боится общественного осужде- ния. За последний год только в британских лабораториях создано более 80 тысяч [ новых животных-мутантов. Гены от че- ловека уже “работают” в микробах, рыбе, , кроликах, мышах, овцах, свиньях и ко- ровах. Кто знает, сколько генов нужно г пересадить мутанту, чтобы он стал чело- веком? Согласится ли церковь окрестить > его? Александр Марголин и Сергей Максименко Общая газета, 11 декабря 1997 г. FOR UNIT 2 Родился ли первый в мире клон человека? В американской семье появился первый в мире клонированный ребенок. Об этом заявила представитель компании С Ion A id Бриджит Буасселье (Brigitte Boisselier), французский химик и член секты раели- тов. Однако с уверенностью заявить об успехе клонирования человека можно бу- дет лишь после проведения независимой генетической экспертизы. По словам г-жи Буасселье, ученые ком- пании успешно завершили эксперимент по клонированию девочки, которая по- явилась на свет 26 декабря 2002 года. Для этого ее матери было сделано кесарево сечение. Девочку, генетическую копию матери, назвали Евой. Эксперимент по клонированию содер- жался в строгом секрете, место его про- ведения неизвестно. Ожидается, что г-жа Буасселье на специальной пресс-конфе- ренции представит миру видеосъемку ро- дов и пригласит, как она утверждает, не- зависимого эксперта для проведения ге- нетической экспертизы ребенка и его ма- тери. Только после этого можно будет с уверенностью сказать об успехе клони- рования человека.
Clones are Coming 471 Раелиты некоторое время назад заявили, что готовы произвести на свет пять че- ловеческих клонов. Секта раелитов — весьма любопытное объединение. Раели- ты утверждают, что у них до 55 тысяч сторонников по всему миру. Они верят, что жизнь на Земле появилась благодаря инопланетянам, прилетевшим на нашу планету 25 тысяч лет назад, а само чело- вечество — продукт клонирования при- шельцев. Основатель секты Раель, в ми- ру — французский журналист Клод Во- рийон (Claude Vorilhon), живет сейчас в Квебеке и утверждает, что все, во что он сегодня верит, ему рассказали сами иноп- ланетяне. Себя он называет пророком и заявляет, что клонирование человека — путь к бессмертию людей. В 1997 году Раель основал на Багамах компанию ClonAid для проведения генетических ис- следований. Заявление Бриджит Буасселье последо- вало спустя неделю после слов другого известного пионера человеческого кло- нирования, итальянского доктора Севе- рино Антинори, пообещавшего, что пер- вый человеческий клон появится на свет в январе 2003 года. Буасселье и Антинори — двое из трех специалистов, впервые заявивших на сов- местной пресс-конференции о своих пла- нах клонировать человека. Третий спе- циалист, живущий в США доктор Панос Завос, не говорил о том, что клонирован- ный ребенок скоро родится, однако под- твердил, что ведет активную программу по клонированию. Многие ученые относятся к подобным заявлениям скептически. В принципе, все признают, что осуществить клонирова- ние человека технически возможно, од- нако сделать это крайне сложно, а глав- ное, по мнению многих специалистов, слишком рискованно, если учесть резуль- таты клонирования животных. www. zaistin и. ru/news, 30 декабря 2002 г. Речь в поддерг Давайте подробнее рассмотрим некото- рые из основных бытующих в обществе возражений против клонирования лю- дей. 1. Сама мысль об этом противоестест- венна и отвратительна. Создание еще одного человека с тем же самым гене- тическим кодом нарушило бы челове- ческое достоинство и уникальность. Эти аргументы сводятся на нет существо- ванием сегодня в мире 150 миллионов человек, чей генетический код не явля- FOR UNIT 2 у клонирования ется уникальным. Я говорю о естествен- ных однояйцевых близнецах, которые по- являются на свет в среднем 1 раз на 67 рождений. Естественные близнецы на- много более одинаковые, чем клоны- близнецы, так как они имеют в точности одинаковый возраст, в то время как клон- близнец и донор ДНК будут иметь раз- ницу в возрасте в несколько десятков лет. Отвратительны ли естественные двой- няшки или тройняшки? Унижают ли близнецы человеческое достоинство? Нет, конечно.
472 The Best of Just English Такая отрицательная реакция во многих случаях — просто результат дезинфор- мации и путаницы вокруг понятия чело- веческого клона. Даже если многие люди все же находят мысль о клонировании человека отвратительной, это не доста- точное основание для запрета. Во имя индивидуальной свободы в этом мире разрешены многие виды деятельности, которые люди находят отвратительными. Например, многие считают отвратитель- ными серьги в носу и операции по изме- нению пола. Но они не запрещены, так как мы ценим свободу выбора. Существу- ет взгляд, что преступления без жертвы не должны считаться преступлениями. А кто был бы жертвой в случае клонирова- ния человека? Трудно поверить, что кло- ны будут считать себя жертвами только потому, что у них тот же самый генети- ческий код, что и у кого-то еще. Ведь миллионы природных близнецов не счи- тают себя жертвами. Также трудно по- нять, как общество в целом могло бы пострадать от клонирования людей. На- оборот, клон, вероятно, должен думать о себе как о ком-то особенном, тем более если он — близнец выдающейся личнос- ти. У клонов также будет преимущество в том, что с самого начала жизни будет известно, к чему у них есть способности. Так где же проблема? 2. Клонирование сократило бы генети- ческое разнообразие, делая нас более уязвимыми к эпидемиям. Это возражение базируется на необосно- ванной экстремальной экстраполяции. На нашей планете существует более 5 млрд, людей. Очевидно, что клонирование че- ловека будет производиться в очень скромных масштабах из-за высокой сто- имости процедуры. Кроме того, боль- шинство женщин все же не захотят быть матерями клонов-близнецов. Пройдет много десятилетий, прежде чем общее ко- личество клонов-людей достигнет хотя бы 1 млн. человек во всем мире. По про- центному соотношению, это составило бы микроскопическую часть от общего населения и не оказало бы никакого воз- действия на генетическое разнообразие людей. Напротив, клонирование челове- ка может помочь нам восполнить поте- рянное генетическое разнообразие. Если же в некотором отдаленном будущем кло- нирование людей станет широко распро- страненным, то некоторые ограничения на такую деятельность могли бы быть оправданы. Однако будем иметь в виду, что даже если создать один клон каждо- го человека на планете, генетическое раз- нообразие практически не уменьшится, поскольку у нас по-прежнему останется 5 млрд, генетически различных индиви- дов. 3. Это может привести к созданию лю- дей-монстров или уродов. Клонирование человека — это не то же самое, что генная инженерия человека. При клонировании ДНК копируется, в результате чего появляется еще один че- ловек — близнец существующего инди- вида и, следовательно, — не монстр или урод. Генная же инженерия подразуме- ваетмодификацию человеческой ДНК, в результате чего может появиться чело- век, непохожий ни на кого. Это могло бы привести к созданию очень необыч- ных людей, даже монстров. Генная ин- женерия человека, имеющая большой позитивный потенциал, действительно очень рискованное предприятие, и дол- жна проводиться только с величайшей осторожностью и под надзором. Клони- рование же безопасно и банально по срав- нению с генной инженерией. Если вы опасаетесь клонирования человека, то генная инженерия человека приведёт вас в ужас!
Clones are Coming 473 4. Диктаторы могут употребить кло- нирование во зло. Существует возможность, что бесприн- ципные диктаторы могут попытаться уве- ковечить свою власть, создав себе кло- на-наследника. Существует также воз- можность, что такие люди могут попы- таться создать супер-армию из тысяч кло- нов Арнольда Шварцнеггера или ему подобных. Эти возможности нельзя сбра- сывать со счетов. Однако важно пони- мать, что законы, принятые в США и других демократических странах, не мо- гут контролировать поведение диктато- ров-негодяев в тоталитарных странах. И если некий диктатор захочет клонировать себя, никакое военное вторжение не смо- жет его остановить. Зло в этих сценариях происходит не от клонирования как тако- вого, а от диктатур. Надлежащим реше- нием был бы всемирный запрет на дик- таторов (что, к сожалению, невозможно)! 5. Технология несовершенна, она мо- жет привести к смерти клона. Ни одна сфера человеческой деятельно- сти не свободна от случайной смерти. Клонирование человека — не исключе- ние. Многие из клонированных в Рослин- ском Институте овечек были мертворож- денные. В настоящий момент техноло- гия клонирования млекопитающих нахо- дится в экспериментальной стадии и про- цент успешных исходов пока что низкий. Судя по дополнительным экспериментам на высших млекопитающих, можно пред- видеть, что процедура клонирования бу- дет усовершенствована вплоть до такого качества, когда риск смерти ребенка-кло- на будет такой же, как и при рождении обычного ребенка. Сорок тысяч человек погибают в США каждый год в автокатастрофах. Авиака- тастрофы уносят каждый год жизни де- сятков и сотен людей и детей в том чис- ле. И, наконец, каждый год и взрослые и дети давятся куриными костями и уми- рают. Однако мы не думаем о запрете на автомобили, самолеты или жареных цып- лят из-за приносимой ими пользы, кото- рая перевешивает риск. Если самолеты были бы изобретены сейчас, а не 90 лет назад, я боюсь, были бы серьезные пред- ложения их запретить из-за риска травм и гибели людей. Абсурдно запрещать но- вые технологические достижения толь- ко потому, что они изначально небезо- пасны. 6. Миллионеры будут клонировать се- бя только для того, чтобы получить органы для трансплантации. Это одно из самых несуразных из всех заявлений насчет клонирования. Челове- ческий клон — это человеческое суще- ство. В свободном обществе нельзя зас- тавить другое человеческое существо от- дать вам один из своих внутренних орга- нов. Также как, например, нельзя убить другого человека, чтобы получить один из его органов. Уже существующие за- коны препятствуют таким злоупотребле- ниям. Заметьте также, что если ваш клон- близнец получил травму при несчастном случае, вас могут попросить отдать одну из ваших почек, чтобы сохранить жизнь клону! Действительно, многие возможные за- конные применения технологии клони- рования связаны с трансплантацией ор- ганов, пересадкой кожи для жертв пожа- ров и т.п. Но в этих случаях не требуется клонирование целого человека, а только выращивание новых тканей или органов для медицинских целей. 7. Действительно ли нам нужно 200 клонов Софи Лорен или Синди Кроу- форд?
474 Возможно нет, и маловероятно, что это случится (хотя идея воспроизведения красивых женщин покажется неплохой большинству мужчин!). Если мы говорим о клонировании живого человека, и тре- буется его согласие, как это и должно быть по закону, крайне маловероятно, что человек согласится на создание 200 кло- нов. Человек скорее всего одобрит созда- ние не более чем 1 или 2 клонов себя. The Best of Just English Вопрос об ограничении количества кло- нов-близнецов встаёт только при клони- ровании уже умершего человека. И вре- мени для подобных дебатов у нас будет достаточно. Конечно же, если просто су- ществуют несколько индивидов с одина- ковой внешностью, таких как двойняш- ки или тройняшки, это вовсе не ведет к деградации человеческой сущности этих людей. “The Case for Cloning Humans " by Steven Vere April 17, 2001 FOR UNIT 3 Ватикан против клонирования Папа Иоанн Павел II выступил в Риме на Всемирном конгрессе трансплантологов (август 2000 г.) с рядом важнейших заяв- лений, отражающих официальную пози- цию Ватикана по вопросам биоэтики. В частности, глава Римской католической церкви категорически осудил экспери- менты по клонированию человека. Вати- кан верен своей традиции: оперативно и недвусмысленно высказываться по са- мым актуальным проблемам современ- ности. Запрет Ватикана на клонирование чело- века с целью получения трансплантоло- гического материала, а также на экспе- рименты с человеческими эмбрионами не стал для участников форума неожидан- ностью. Католическая церковь неоднок- ратно подчеркивала, что человеческая личность является таковой с момента оп- лодотворения яйцеклетки. И любое вме- шательство в акт божественного творе- ния абсолютно недопустимо. Последним и наиболее авторитетным заявлением по этому вопросу стала декларация, опуб- ликованная Папской Академией по воп- росам жизни. Так что словами о запрете клонирования человека Иоанн Павел II лишь придал окончательную определен- ность официальной позиции Ватикана. При этом часть выступления папы перед учеными была посвящена не запрету, а, напротив, одобрению трансплантации, что стало поистине новым словом в био- этической доктрине Ватикана. Папа бла- гословил трансплантологию как перспек- тивную отрасль медицины и горячо одоб- рил практику донорства органов. “Донор- ство, — сказал он, — это благородное дело, дело истинной любви. Ведь отда- ется даже не что-то свое, отдается часть самого себя!” www. implant.yo. lv, 2003 г.
Clones are Coming 475 FOR UNIT 3, 4 Против клонирования выступили представители многих религиозный конфессий и государств Против первого клонированного младен- ца уже выступили христиане, мусульма- не и иудеи. Политики и общественные деятели сочли необходимым выразить протест в связи с сообщением о появле- нии на свет крошки Евы. Возмущение биологической безотцовщиной объеди- нило мир. Вот лишь несколько цитат из речей раз- личных деятелей, прозвучавших по дан- ному поводу: Пресс-секретарь Папы Римского Хоакин Наварро-Вальс: “Само по себе заявление о рождении клони- рованного ребенка (поставленное под сомнение международным на- учным сообществом) есть проявле- ние брутального менталитета, лише- но этического и гуманитарного смысла”. • Духовный лидер суннитов Егип- та Али Абу эль-Хасан: “Клониро- вание означает хаос. Наука должна регулироваться законами во имя гу- манности и достоинства”. • Духовный лидер ваххабитов Сау- довской Аравии Айед бин Ахмад аль-Курани: “Клонирование пося- гает на божественную сущность происхождения человека. Это неми- нуемо приведет к распространению неведомых болезней. Это разрушит узы брака. Это грех, грех, грех”. • Главный раввин Израиля Меир Лау: “Для клонирования и иных форм сотворения жизни неесте- ственным пу-тем необходимо опре- делить границы, за которыми—по- сягательство на замысел Творца, в чьих руках и жизнь, и смерть”. • Президент Франции Жак Ширак: “Клонирование людей противоре- чит человеческому достоинству”. • Пресс-секретарь ООН Фрэд Эк- хард: “Полагаю, в любом случае, никто не ожидает, что генеральный секретарь пошлет цветы младенцу и матери”. • Генеральный секретарь Совета Европы (СЕ) Вальтер Швиммер призвал ратифицировать протокол, запрещающий клонирование чело- века. Протокол СЕ, запрещающий “любую операцию, направленную на создание человека, идентичного другому, живому или мертвому” без каких бы то ни было исключений, вступивший в силу в марте 2001 го- да, ратифицировали только 12 из 44 членов СЕ. В своем коммюнике В. Швиммер призвал неприсоединив- шиеся к этому документу страны ра- тифицировать протокол, чтобы Ев- ропа стала районом, “свободным от клонирования”. www.zaistinu.ru/news 30 декабря 2002 г.
476 The Best of Just English FOR UNIT 4 "Клонированию — нет!" превратилось в “почему нет?" Некоторое время назад подавляющее большинство общественных организаций США и Белый Дом выступили за запре- щение клонирования человека. Тем не менее, в научных лабораториях и меди- цинских центрах все чаще говорят об ис- пользовании техники клонирования в бездетных семьях. Метод клонирования, считают медики, ничем не хуже и не амо- ральнее, чем искусственное осеменение, оплодотворение в пробирке, заморажи- вание человеческого эмбриона и вына- шивание ребенка для другой женщины, то есть все те методы, которые уже ши- роко практикуются. Никто не может ли- шить американских граждан конституци- онной свободы репродукции любым пу- тем, каким они пожелают. [...] Постепенно идея клонирования завое- вывает все больше сторонников. Но не слишком ли быстро завоевывает? Гото- во ли человечество к этому? И, наконец, что говорит о клонировании закон? На эти вопросы отвечает доктор права Эрнест Ван ден Хааг. — Я не вижу причин для запрета клони- рования. Федерального закона, запреща- ющего клонирование, нет и, думаю, не будет. Закон штата Калифорния можно оспорить в высших судебных инстанци- ях. Ограничивать исследования в этом плане нецелесообразно и недальновид- но. Я не считаю этот метод воспроизвод- ства себе подобных хуже в глазах зако- на, чем обычное зачатие. Люди хотят иметь детей, а каким способом — это их дело. То, что этот метод может быть ис- пользован во вред кому-то — не аргу- мент, ибо во вред может быть использо- вано все что угодно: столовый нож, вил- ка, утюг, однако никто не запрещает вы- пускать ножи, вилки и утюги. Другое дело, что должен быть принят закон, не запрещающий, а регулирующий процесс клонирования. Что касается так называ- емого выращивания двойников для ис- пользования их органов, здесь и нужен закон, защищающий право любого чело- века, в том числе и выведенного мето- дом клонирования, на жизнь. Но пока все это больше фантазия, чем реальность. Самое интересное на нынешней стадии исследований, как считают ученые, это возможность генетического усовершен- ствования клона путем введения в кло- нируемую клетку определенного гена, скажем, ответственного за сопротивле- ние СПИДу. Такие гены уже найдены. И такое “впрыскивание” гена морально ни- чем не отличается от вакцинации детей. А. Сиротин Московский Комсомолец, Москва 1998 г.
Clones are Coming 477 FOR UNIT 4 Права клонов С юридической точки зрения, человечес- кие клоны будут иметь те же самые юри- дические права и обязанности, что и лю- бой человек. Клоны будут человечески- ми существами в самом полном смысле этого слова. Никто не будет иметь права держать клона в качестве раба. Рабство было запрещено в США в 1865 году. Бо- лее того, клонирование человека будет осуществляться на индивидуальной доб- ровольной основе. Живой человек, кото- рого собираются клонировать, должен будет дать на это свое согласие. Точно так же и женщина, которая будет вына- шивать клона-близнеца и потом растить этого ребенка, должна действовать доб- ровольно. Никакой другой сценарий не- мыслим для свободной демократической страны. Поскольку при клонировании требуется женщина, чтобы вынашивать ребенка, нет опасности, что ученые-зло- деи будут создавать тысячи клонов в сек- ретных лабораториях. Клонирование бу- дет делаться только по просьбе и при участии обычных людей в качестве до- полнительной альтернативы для воспро- изводства. Некоторые политики в Соединенных Штатах сейчас предлагают уберечь нас от всех несчастий, связанных с клониро- ванием людей, путем полного законода- тельного запрета. Интересно, что при ближайшем рассмотрении никаких серь- езных проблем в действительности не существует. В нескольких случаях, ког- да возможны злоупотребления, они мо- гут быть предотвращены с помощью уз- конаправленного законодательства. И нет ничего, связанного с клонированием че- ловека как таковым, что оправдывало бы его криминализацию. Единственное воз- ражение, которое остается в результате анализа состоит в том, что технология клонирования пока не совершенна. Но это повод для дальнейших исследований, а не для запрета. Количество фантастических и абсурдных возражений против клонирования чело- века просто изумляет. Оно показывает полное отсутствие понимания этого про- цесса у широкой публики. Вместо того, чтобы потворствовать страхам, исходя- щим из неведения, политикам следовало бы принять программу, формирующую у общественности объективное понима- ние этого вопроса. Если законодатели США окажутся достаточно глупы, что- бы провозгласить клонирование челове- ка преступлением, велика вероятность, что Верховный суд объявит их решение антиконституционным. Но даже если он этого не сделает, у американцев все рав- но останется возможность отправиться в другую свободную страну, чтобы осуще- ствить эту процедуру. “The Case for Cloning Humans ” by Steven Vere April 17, 2001
478 The Best of Just English FOR UNITS 3, 4 Конвейер бессмертия С момента, когда клонированная британ- скими учеными овечка Долли впервые появилась на телеэкранах, мир потерял спокойствие. Ученые и журналисты, по- литики и религиозные авторитеты раз- личных конфессий состязаются друг с другом в сочинении сюжетов ужасов: “Армии искусственно созданных бездуш- ных приматов объявляют крестовый по- ход против имеющих душу!” Поскольку закон о запрете клонирования человека готовится и в России, законо- мерно появление в Госдуме Комитета в защиту клонирования. Что это за орга- низация? Чего она добивается? Какие у нее аргументы? С этими вопросами я об- ратился к секретарю комитета, исполни- тельному директору Фонда радикально- го продления жизни, ученому-биологу Сергею Велоровичу БОДРОВУ. — Клонирование — это получение абсо- лютной генетической копии того живо- го организма, чей генный материал был использован. Сущность клонирования та- кова. Берется любая клетка животного, освобождается от собственной ДНК, в нее пересаживается ДНК от другого жи- вотного, но непременно того же самого биологического вида, и в начальной ста- дии развития эмбрион помещается в мат- ку любого животного этого же вида. На животных подобные опыты успешно проведены. Нет ничего технически не- возможного проделать все то же с чело- веческой клеткой. — Надеюсь, вы не сторонник серийно- го производства биороботов. В чем же тогда смысл клонирования человека? — Давайте сразу покончим с биоробота- ми и рукотворными Гитлерами. Никто ведь не может помешать вырастить без- душного убийцу из самого обычного ре- бенка. Так что метод клонирования сам по себе не увеличивает арсенал возмож- ного зла. Другое дело — необходимы такие разумные законодательные ограни- чения, которые сделали бы затруднитель- ным использование метода во зло. Безо- говорочный запрет — не лучшее реше- ние. Чтобы найти оптимальное, как раз и создан наш комитет. — Зачем это нужно? — Представьте себе немолодых супру- гов, единственный ребенок которых уми- рает. Горе, испытываемое родителями, зачастую столь велико, что вся их даль- нейшая жизнь становится невыносимой. Когда же метод клонирования человека будет отработан, таким родителям мож- но будет помочь. Человек умер, но не все клетки организ- ма погибают одновременно. Тотчас пос- ле медицинской констатации факта смер- ти можно будет взять одну из еще не умерших клеток организма и выращивать из нее клон. Вскоре у переживших не- счастье родителей вновь появится мла- денец — однояйцевый близнец умерше- го ребенка. Согласитесь, для отца с ма- терью такой возврат к жизни любимого чада может оказаться спасением. — Но все равно это будет другой ребе- нок, сколь бы похожим он ни был. Что при этом станет с душой новорожден- ного? Окажется ли она у него вообще? Будет ли это душа умершего близнеца или какая-то другая? — Об этом можно будет говорить все- рьез, когда гипотеза о существовании
Clones are Coming 479 души и ее божественном происхождении получит научное подтверждение. Пока этого нет. В любом случае, если удастся вырастить клонированного близнеца, это ведь тоже произойдет по Божьей воле. А значит, ничего противного Всевышнему не случится. — Но, насколько я знаю, представители крупнейших религиозных конфессий про- тив опытов по клонированию человека. Правильно ли с этим не считаться? — Во-первых, это верно лишь отчасти. Решительно против пока что высказыва- лось лишь руководство католической и мусульманской церквей. Глава же Русс- кой православной церкви Патриарх Алек- сий II занял по этому вопросу достаточ- но мягкую позицию. Он сказал в интер- вью журналу Природа, что возможность клонирования человека требует изуче- ния. Каких-либо суждений о клонирова- нии ни в одной из священных книг ни одной религии нет. Поэтому вопрос о греховности метода остается открытым и с религиозной точки зрения. Во-вторых, если, к примеру, бездетная супружеская пара хочет обзавестись сво- им собственным, биологическим родным ребенком, а ученые способны ей в этом помочь, так ли уж необходимо испраши- вать соизволение какого бы то ни было духовного авторитета? — Пока что все ваши аргументы вполне гуманны. — Это естественно. Ведь в состав наше- го комитета вошли нормальные люди, обеспокоенные решением жизненно важ- ных проблем человечества, а отнюдь не “фаусты”, от которых неизвестно чего ждать. А вот еще один довод в пользу клониро- вания человека. Сотни тысяч людей еже- годно умирают, так и не дождавшись до- норского органа: печени, почки, сердца для операции по трансплантации. Да и само это ожидание противоестественно. Ведь приходится ждать гибели своего безвестного спасителя. Причем еще воп- рос, будет ли долгожданный донорский орган совместим с организмом больного по крови, по тканям, не произойдет ли иммуноотторжения. Клонирование чело- века иначе решает проблему трансплан- тации. Можно будет загодя выращивать из клетки человека его клон-двойник, но без головы и головного мозга. Уже че- тыре года назад в Великобритании, в уни- верситете Бата, затем в Техасском уни- верситете в США путем биохимическо- го вмешательства были получены безго- ловые эмбрионы головастиков и мышей. В принципе, можно вырастить в лабора- торных условиях человеческий клон без головы и поддерживать его жизнедея- тельность принудительным искусствен- ным питанием. — Но это фактически будет банк зап- частей для человека? — Вот именно. Кроме того, вскоре, ве- роятно, завершатся опыты по выращи- ванию отдельных органов животных из соответствующих участков эмбрионов. — Скажите, но, разбирая безголовый клон человека на запчасти, не совершат ли ради гуманной цели убийство? Кто поручится, что, если нет головы, нет и души? — Во всяком случае, это не более анти- гуманно, чем делать аборты. Если думать о душе, в шести-семинедельном плоде она присутствует с неменьшей вероятно- стью. Однако только в России проводят- ся миллионы абортов ежегодно. — Значит, создав банк клонированных запчастей и пересаживая их человеку по
480 The Best of Just English мере износа его органов, можно суще- ственно продлить жизнь? — Не зря ведь наш Фонд Радикального Продления Жизни борется против нера- зумного запрета на клонирование. По самым минимальным оценкам, продлить жизнь удастся до 500—1000 лет, посколь- ку нервные клетки стареют гораздо мед- леннее других. А за столь длительное время, уверен, проблема старения будет решена. —- Выходит, добейся сейчас ваш коми- тет принятия разумного закона о кло- нировании — и наше с вами поколение может стать первым неумирающим? —Хотелось бы верить. Чтобы вырастить клон, потребуется 20—25 лет. Значит, все, чей возраст позволяет прожить еще столько лет, имеют шансы на продление жизни. Но, как писал Николай Федоров, “бес- смертие — общее дело, оно не допускает отбора избранных”. Выращивание кло- нов для 150 миллионов россиян потре- бует как минимум еще одного бюджета. А нам и единственный-то никак не на- скрести. С другой стороны, нынешние экономи- ческие трудности искусственно раздуты и вполне преодолимы. А выращивание собственного клона в перспективе обой- дется не дороже содержания ребенка. Рождаемость, правда, падает, но ведь не все отказываются от рождения детей из- за материальных трудностей. Надеюсь, что и от бессмертия тоже не откажутся. Савелий Кашницкий Московский Комсомолец, Москва 13 мая 1998 г. FOR UNIT 4 Российское общество будущих клоиировщиков готовит документы для Думы У западных ученых, объявивших о наме- рении осуществить эксперимент по кло- нированию человека, неожиданно объя- вились ярые сторонники в России. Еще в декабре 1997 года в нашей стране был создан так называемый “Комитет по за- щите клонирования и бессмертия”. Лю- бопытно, что среди активистов комите- та — несколько биологов и специалис- тов по геронтологии, хотя известные уче- ные в его списках не значатся. Организа- торы сейчас начинают просветительскую работу среди населения, пытаются при- влечь в свои ряды бизнесменов и поли- тиков. — С детства я остро чувствовал течение времени, — поведал обозревателю Об- щей газеты один из активистов комите- та, кандидат медицинских наук Сергей Бодров. — Мы просто не задумыва- емся о том, как мало живем. Больной СПИДом чувствует себя обреченным, когда узнает, что ему осталось жить два- три года. Я ощущаю то же самое из-за того, что мне отпущено в лучшем случае
Clones are Coming 481 еще 30 — 40 лет. Образно говоря, мы все заражены “вирусом старости” и воспри- нимаем это как должное, никто не хочет с ним бороться. Клонирование людей от- крывает значительные возможности для продления жизни. “Защитники бессмертия” считают, что клонирование людей в России должно быть взято под государственный конт- роль, и разрабатывают сейчас свою про- грамму. Они пытаются увлечь своей иде- ей бизнесменов и предлагают закупить оборудование и развернуть центры по клонированию уже сейчас. По их мне- нию, у нас есть достаточно специалис- тов, которые могли бы освоить эту про- грамму. Елена Славина Общая газета, Москва 29 января 1998 г. FOR UNIT 4 Россия против клонирования человека Российское правительство приняло в тре- тьем, окончательном чтении законопро- ект “О временном запрете клонирования человека”. За эту законодательную ини- циативу единогласно проголосовали 365 депутатов. Законопроект вводит пятилет- ний мораторий на клонирование “целос- тного организма человека”. Запрещает- ся также вывоз и ввоз эмбрионов челове- ка, если они произведены путем клони- рования. При этом документ не запреща- ет клонирование других организмов, на- пример, животных. Большинство стран мира негативно относятся к клонирова- нию, и только в Великобритании разре- шено воспроизводство человеческого эм- бриона в научно-исследовательских це- лях. В США клонирование человека при- знается федеральным преступлением, а Германия и Франция решили предложить международный запрет на клонирование. Интерфакс 19 апреля 2002 г. FOR UNIT 4 Мнение Евросоюза Специальная комиссия Евросоюза заяви- ла, что считает клонирование человека экспериментом, не имеющим никакой научной цели и смысла и даже нанося- щим вред научному прогрессу в целом. Комиссия даже приняла решение об от- казе от финансирования каких-либо ис- следований, связанных с клонированием эмбриона и одобрила действия тех стран Евросоюза, которые приняли закон о зап- рещении клонирования человека на сво- ей территории. Издание законов, запрещающих клони- рование человека, сейчас готовится сра- зу в нескольких странах. Например, в США уже есть законопроект о запрете на клонирование людей, который ранее был утвержден палатой представителей. Президент США Буш выразил готов-
482 The Best of Just English ность подписать этот документ. Всего же запрет на клонирование действует уже в 42 странах мира. Кроме того, не исклю- чено, что на сессии Генеральной Ассам- блеи ООН будет рассмотрен вопроса о глобальном запрете на клонирование че- ловека. Бурное обсуждение проблемы клонирования началось после того, как итальянский ученый Северино Антино- ри и американский врач Панайотис За- вос объявляли о своей попытке впервые в мировой практике осуществить клони- рование человека. При этом отмечалось, что ученые уже работают с 200 супру- жескими парами, в том числе из США, Великобритании и Италии, которые дали согласие добровольно участвовать в уни- кальном эксперименте. В случае успеха ученые рассчитывают на одновременное появление 200 младенцев-клонов. Узнав о намерении Северино Антинори, ливийский лидер Муаммар Каддафи предложил итальянскому врачу и его ко- манде приехать в Ливию и там начать опыты по клонированию человека. При этом Антинори был предложен целый флигель в одной из лучших клиник Три- поли, где он смог бы беспрепятственно ставить свои опыты над человеческими эмбрионами. Если Антинори и его асси- стентам действительно удастся клониро- вать человека, то в награду за выдающи- еся достижения в области медицины Кад- дафи обещал выплатить им 1 млн. дол- ларов. Интерфакс 27 июля 2001 г. FOR UNIT 4 Евросоюз: Клонирование: запрет или общин закон? Европейская Комиссия ЕС выступила с призывом к глобальному запрещению клонирования человека. Исполнитель- ный орган Европейского Союза считает, что о необходимости принятия такой ме- ры свидетельствуют “очевидные этичес- кие соображения”. Кроме того, как счи- тают в Брюсселе, подобная практика яв- ляется безответственной с точки зрения науки. По словам члена Европейской Комиссии Филиппа Бюскена, отвечающего в ЕС за политику в области научных исследова- ний, “опыты на животных показывают, что все еще остается немало неточных результатов и рисков, связанных с кло- нированием”. Европейская Комиссия готовит исчерпы- вающий доклад о проблеме клонирова- ния человека. Ожидается, что он послу- жит основой принятия новых законода- тельных мер в этой области уже к концу текущего года. Клонирование запрещено Европейской Хартией основных прав человека. Ны- нешнее заявление исполнительного орга- на ЕС стало реакцией на сообщения о первом в мире ребенке, якобы появив- шемся на свет в результате клонирова- ния человека, осуществленном сектой раэлитов. Евросоюз выступает за выработку меж- дународной конвенции по запрещению репродуктивного клонирования людей.
Clones are Coming 483 “Опыты с животными демонстрируют риски, связанные с клонированием жи- вых организмов”, — сказал представи- тель ЕС. В программе научных иссле- дований ЕС до 2006 года исключено вы- деление каких-либо средств на работы, связанные с репродуктивным клониро- ванием, изменением генетической на- следственности и созданием человечес- ких эмбрионов. Филипп Бюскен напоми- нает, что репродуктивное клонирование людей уже запрещено протоколом Кон- венции Совета Европы по правам чело- века и биомедицине. В этой связи он при- ветствует решимость других стран вклю- читься в разработку глобального запре- та на репродуктивное клонирование. Для арабских клонов напишут общий закон Между тем, страны Персидского Залива согласовывают свое законодательство по вопросам клонирования в различных об- ластях. Решение о необходимости согла- сования было принято на состоявшейся в Абу-Да-би (ОАЭ) конференции мини- стров здравоохранения стран-членов Со- вета сотрудничества арабских государств Персидского залива. Министры Саудов- ской Аравии, ОАЭ, Омана, Кувейта, Ка- тара и Бахрейна также решили создать объединенную комиссию по биологиче- ской этике, которая будет рассматривать проблемы, связанные с генной инжене- рией и исследованиями в этой сфере. ww. о bozrevatel. сот 9 января 2003 г. FOR UNIT 2—4 Миллиардер защищает клонирование! Американский миллиардер Джим Кларк, известный в компьютерных кругах пред- приниматель, приостановил перечисле- ние пожертвования в 60 миллионов дол- ларов одному из университетов штата Калифорния в знак протеста против по- литических ограничений на исследова- ния в области клонирования. Кларк, ос- нователь таких компаний как Netscape и WebMD, заявил, что запреты на научные работы в этой области грозят ввергнуть США в “первобытную эпоху медицинс- ких исследований”. Запреты на работы с клонированием ока- зались в центре внимания общественно- сти после решения Палаты Представите- лей американского Конгресса и последо- вавшего заявления президента Буша об ограничении финансирования в этой об- ласти. Дебаты о целесообразности этих реше- ний идут до сих пор. Противники абор- тов, к примеру, хотят добиться полной остановки работ такого рода, так как при получении стволовых клеток разрушает- ся человеческий эмбрион. Но Кларк, известный своей способнос- тью распознавать новые тенденции в тех- нологии и науке, занимает прямо проти- воположную позицию. По его мнению, исследования, связанные с клонировани- ем жизненно необходимы для развития медицины. Он обвиняет американских политиков в невежестве и страхе перед неведомым. Многие ученые обеспокое-
484 The Best of Just English ны влиянием, которое могут оказать в наложенные американскими властями на долгосрочной перспективе ограничения, исследования по клонированию клеток. Дэвид Уиллис, БиБиСи, Лос-Анджелес 1 сентября 2001 г. Клонированию— Kaput?! Ученые пришли к неожиданным выво- дам — в результате клонирования жи- вотных почти всегда получается суще- ство с теми или иными отклонениями. Процесс клонирования подвергает опас- ности целостность генетической струк- туры животного. Это ведет к тому, что клонам, так или иначе, угрожают пнев- мония, проблемы с печенью, быстрое ста- рение и преждевременная смерть, т.е уче- ные не могут заменить Бога и вдохнуть во Франкенштейна жизнь. Полученные результаты могут стать последней про- боиной на тонущем “Титанике” клони- рования человека. Исследования доказывают, что если кло- нированное животное появилось на свет нормальным, в будущем проблемы со здоровьем будут расти как снежный ком. Таким образом, клонирование с целью создания человека очень опасно, а поэто- му и неэтично. Даже эксперимент с овечкой Долли увен- чался успехом только после нескольких сотен неудачных проб, да и то она тяже- ло болела на протяжении своей недолгой жизни. Болезнь Долли широко обсужда- лась в прессе. Специалисты вынесли не- утешительный вердикт: это преждевре- менная старость, и лечение бессмыс- ленно. На сегодняшний день только примерно два процента клонированных животных достигают зрелого возраста. Остальные погибают на эмбриональных стадиях. Те, что выживают, обладают неустойчивым иммунитетом, подвержены простудным заболеваниям и стареют в 2—3 раза быс- трее “оригиналов”. А сколько клониро- ванных мышей, крыс, коз, телят, поро- сят и приматов погибло в ходе экспери- мента — узнать не представляется воз- можным. Русская служба БиБиСи 10 сентября 2002 г. FOR UNIT 4 Запрет клонирования человека в европейском праве Постановка проблемы С юридической точки зрения, клониро- вание человека вступает в противоречие (печатается с сокращениями) с рядом важнейших прав личности, с пра- вом на человеческое достоинство и про- истекающим из него правом на целост- ность личности. Не нужно забывать о тех
Clones are Coming 485 правовых проблемах, к которым приве- дет появление клона человека. Первой же проблемой станет вопрос о том, будет ли клон человека субъектом права, и если да, то будет ли его правосубъектность совпадать с правосубъектностью ориги- нала. Колоссальной юридической голо- воломкой станет урегулирование отно- шений между оригинальной личностью и его клоном хотя бы в том, что касается идентификации личности (кто есть кто), правопреемства, семейных отношений и т. п. В зависимости от целей производства клона различают клонирование, направ- ленное на воспроизводство человеческо- го существа как способа размножения (репродуктивное клонирование) и клони- рование для медицинских целей (тера- певтическое клонирование), например, в целях регенерации органов того же чело- века или производства медицинских пре- паратов. Главным направлением в сфере терапевтического клонирования являют- ся исследования в области выращивания так называемых стволовых клеток, кото- рые представляют собой своего рода строительный материал организма; они появляются на 4—5 день его развития. По мнению многих, исследования в об- ласти стволовых клеток и являются тем самым экстраординарным случаем, ког- да клонирование человека может быть разрешено, т.к. они могут помочь сохра- нить жизнь сотням и тысячам естествен- но-рожденных. Однако, как правило, за- конодатель игнорирует это мнение и ча- ще всего использует только один регу- лятор для упорядочения этих отноше- ний — запрет. Запрет клонирования человека получает всё большее распространение в различ- ных странах мира и на международном уровне. Сегодня этой проблемой обес- покоены почему-то только развитые стра- ны, хотя проблема клонирования — про- блема не только развитого мира. Однако правовое регулирование этой сферы в развивающихся странах отсутствует. Конечно же, оптимально было бы ввести запрет клонирования на основе универ- сального международного договора, и с предложением об этом в Объединённые Нации уже обратились правительства Германии и Франции, но пока никакого универсального акта в этой сфере не су- ществует. Запрет на клонирование наиболее рас- пространён в Европе. Он обеспечивает- ся на региональном уровне в меж-дуна- родном праве, в праве Европейского Со- юза и на уровне национального законо- дательства отдельных государств. Запрет клонирования человека на международном уровне В Европе существует единственный на сегодняшний день международный акт, устанавливающий запрет клонирования человека — Дополнительный протокол о запрете клонирования человека 1998 г. к Конвенции Совета Европы о правах че- ловека в биомедицине 1996 г. Статья 1 Дополнительного протокола гласит: “Любое вмешательство с целью создание человека, генетически идентичного дру- гому человеку, будь то живому или мёр- твому, запрещается”. При всей позитивной направленности по- ложений Дополнительный протокол име- ет несколько уязвимых моментов. Во- первых, Дополнительный протокол не проводит различия между репродуктив- ным клонированием и терапевтическим клонированием. Во-вторых, Дополни- тельный протокол не подписан всеми ев- ропейскими государствами, в том числе,
486 The Best of Just English не подписан и Россией (только 19 стран участвуют в нем). Запрет клонирования человека на над- национальном уровне Несколько по-другому запрет клониро- вания сегодня определён в праве Евро- пейского Союза. Он установлен в Хар- тии Европейского Союза об основных правах, подписанной в Ницце в 2000 г., которая является самым современным актом о правах человека. Статья 3 Хар- тии провозглашает право на целостность личности. В качестве гарантии, осуще- ствления этого права устанавливается за- прет репродуктивного клонирования. В отличие от Дополнительного протоко- ла 1998 г. к Конвенции Совета Евро- пы 1996 г., Хартия об основных правах 2000 г. делает различия между репродук- тивным и терапевтическим клонировани- ем. И последний тип клонирования Хар- тией не запрещается. Проблема клонирования человека уже достаточно давно беспокоит европейские структуры. Европейский парламент при- нял первую резолюцию о клонировании человеческих эмбрионов ещё в 1993 г. Именно Европейский парламент первым отреагировал на появление практической возможности клонирования человека в 1997 г. своей Резолюцией о клонирова- нии от 12 марта 1997 г. в которой при- звал провести законодательный запрет клонирования в национальном праве го- сударств-членов Европейского Союза и на международном уровне. По сути дела Европейский парламент все- гда выступал за запрещение не только репродуктивного, но и терапевтическо- го клонирования человека. Эта позиция чётко была определена в обращении Ев- ропейского парламента к Палате Общин Великобритании от 7 сентября 2000 г., в котором разрешение терапевтического клонирования называется “непоправи- мым переходом границ исследовательс- ких норм”. Очевидно, прослеживается некоторая неопределенность Европейс- кого Союза в отношении терапевтичес- кого клонирования человеческих клеток. Оно не запрещается в Хартии об основ- ных правах, но и разрешение его не одоб- ряется официальными структурами Ев- ропейского Союза. Запрет клонирования человека на на- циональном уровне Национальные законы государств-членов Европейского Союза, как правило, не раз- личают репродуктивное и терапевтичес- кое клонирование человека и запрещают любой из типов. Наиболее яростным противником кло- нирования человека в Европе и в мире является Германия. Немцам, как ника- кому другому народу, известна практи- ка неэтических экспериментов над людь- ми, проводимая при нацистском режи- ме, и её ужасающие последствия. Феде- ральный закон ФРГ о защите эмбрионов 1990 г. называет преступлением созда- ние эмбриона генетически идентичного другому эмбриону, происходящему от живого или мертвого лица. Закон Испании о процедурах, способст- вующих репродукции 1988 г. также ус- танавливает уголовную ответственность за клонирование человеческого эмбрио- на. В Дании исследования в области кло- нирования запрещены Актом о системе научных комитетов по этике и управле- нию биомедицинскими исследовательс- кими проектами 1992 г. Аналогичное за- конодательство имеет Италия, Нидер- ланды, Швеция, Франция и Бельгия. Наиболее сложная ситуация с запретом клонирования человека сложилась в Be-
Clones are Coming 487 ликобритании. Там эту сферу регулиру- ет Акт о зачатии человека и эмбриоло- гии 1990 г., который до недавнего време- ни не охватывал методики клонирования человека и, соответственно, не проводил дифференциации между репродуктив- ным и терапевтическим клонированием. Великобритания является своего рода “родиной” клонирования, именно там, в Рослинском институте Эдинбургского университета (Шотландия) было прове- дено в 1997 г. первое клонирование круп- ного млекопитающего — знаменитой овечки Долли. Великобритания облада- ет самыми передовыми достижениями в области генной инженерии и идея разре- шения клонирования человеческого орга- низма в британских научных кругах дос- таточно популярна. Осенью 2000 года британское правитель- ство внесло в Палату Общин законопро- ект об изменении Акта о человеческом зачатии и эмбриологии 1990 г. Суть из- менений сводилась к разрешению опы- тов с человеческими эмбрионами, полу- ченными способом клонирования в те- рапевтических целях на основе лицензии, выдаваемой специально уполномочен- ным органом министерства здравоохра- нения. Разрешение касалось возможнос- ти проведения опытов с клонами эмбри- онов возрастом до четырнадцати дней с целью исследований в области стволо- вых клеток. Инициативе Кабинета министров пред- шествовал подготовленный специально для правительства доклад профессора Л. Дональдсона “Исследование стволовых клеток: медицинский прогресс и ответ- ственность”. В этом докладе в частности отмечалось, что подобные исследования могут оказать колоссальную помощь ме- дицине в лечении многих неизлечимых заболеваний (болезнь Айнцгеймера, бо- лезнь Паркинсона) и регенерации орга- нов или тканей, повреждение которых сегодня ведет к инвалидности или не со- вместимы с жизнью. Парламент Соединенного Королевства счёл эти доводы достаточными для эти- ческого оправдания разрешения клони- рования человеческого организма в те- рапевтических целях и утвердил в конце января 2001 г. соответствующие поправ- ки к Акту о человеческом зачатии и эм- бриологии 1990 г. Далее ситуация стала развиваться совер- шенно неожиданно. Общественная орга- низация “Альянс за жизнь” в судебном порядке оспорила решение Парламента. Судья Высокого Суда Крейн, рассматри- вавший дело, в своем решении указал, что в связи с существующими определения- ми клонирование в Великобритании ни- какими актами не запрещается. Правительство Соединенного Королев- ства отреагировало на это решение неза- медлительно. Во-первых, в Палату Об- щин был направлен проект Билля о реп- родуктивном клонировании человека. Во- вторых, в Палату Лордов была подана апелляция на вышеприведенное решение Высокого Суда. Билль о репродуктивном клонировании человека был принят Палатой Общин в конце 2001 г. и в настоящий момент на- ходится на рассмотрении в Палате Лор- дов Парламента Великобритании. Билль предусматривает запрет репродуктивно- го клонирования человека, объявляет это деяние преступлением и вводит наказа- ние за него в виде тюремного заключе- ния сроком до 10 лет. Билль полностью соответствует духу и букве Хартии Ев- ропейского Союза об основных правах в этом вопросе, несмотря на то, что Be-
488 The Best of Just English ликобритания является противником придания Хартии обязательной силы. В марте 2002 г. Палата Лордов удовлет- ворила апелляцию правительства и от- менила решение Высокого Суда, которое выводит клонирование за рамки действия Акта о человеческом зачатии и эмбрио- логии 1990 г. Ситуация с запретом репродуктивного клонирования в Великобритании указы- вает на необходимость установления пря- мых законодательных запретов клони- рования человека, а не регулирования этой сферы на основе актов, посвящен- ных биомедицине вообще. Даже если та- кой запрет косвенно предусмотрен Кон- ституцией страны, как это имеет место в Конституции Швейцарии 1999 г., всё же во избежание возможных коллизий, свя- занных с дальнейшим развитием биоме- дицины, по нашему мнению, необходи- мо устанавливать прямой запрет репро- дуктивного клонирования на основе спе- циального акта, посвящённого именно этому. В данной связи представляется важным и вполне обоснованным введение запре- та клонирования человека в России на основе специального Федерального зако- на РФ “О временном запрете на клони- рование человека”, принятого Государ- ственной Думой 19 апреля 2002 г. Ста- тья 2 Федерального закона определяет клонирование человека как “создание че- ловека, генетически идентичного друго- му живому или умершему человеку, пу- тем переноса в лишенную ядра женскую половую клетку клетки ядра соматичес- кой клетки человека”. Однако слабость этого законодательного акта состоит в том, что он вводит именно временный запрет клонирования человека и факти- чески не запрещает, а замораживает ис- следования в этой области, прибегает к мораторию на клонирование человека на ближайшие пять лет. П.А. Калиниченко 2003 г. Декларация в защиту клонирования и неприкосновенности научных исследований Мы, нижеподписавшиеся, приветствуем сообщение о крупных успехах в клони- ровании высших животных. На протя- жении нынешнего столетия научные ис- следования существенно расширили воз- можности человека. Их достижения, в ос- новном, способствовали колоссальному возрастанию человеческого благополу- чия. Когда же новые технологии порож- дали вполне правомерные этические воп- росы, человеческое сообщество в целом демонстрировало готовность встречать эти вопросы открыто и искать такие от- веты, которые направлены на общее благо. Клонирование действительно ставит эти- ческие проблемы. Поэтому необходимо разработать соответствующие директи- вы, которые позволят предотвратить зло- употребления, в то же время сделав мак- симально доступными выгоды клониро- вания. Эти директивы должны как можно больше учитывать автономию и выбор каждого отдельного человека. Не- обходимо также предпринять все меры,
Clones are Coming 489 чтобы сохранить свободу и неприкосно- венность научных исследований. Никто еще не продемонстрировал умение кло- нировать человека. Однако сама возмож- ность того, что современные достижения могут открыть путь к клонированию, выз- вала град протестов. Мы с беспокойством отмечаем широко распространяющиеся призывы не финансировать или прервать исследования по клонированию, которые исходят от таких известных политичес- ких и религиозных деятелей, как прези- дент США Джордж Буш, президент Франции Жак Ширак, бывший премьер- министр Великобритании Джон Мейд- жор и представитель Ватикана. Мы верим, что разум — самое мощное средство для решения проблем, с кото- рыми сталкивается человечество. Но в потоке нападок на клонирование разум- ные аргументы—крайняя редкость. Кри- тики увлечены поиском параллелей с ми- фом об Икаре и Франкенштейном Мери Шелли, предсказанием ужасных послед- ствий в случае, если исследователи отва- жатся посягнуть на вопросы, ответы на которые “человеку знать не положено”. За наиболее грубой критикой, видимо, кроется допущение, будто клонирование человека поднимет более глубокие мо- ральные проблемы, чем те, которые воз- никали в связи с любым предшествую- щим научным или техническим достиже- нием. Какие же моральные проблемы может породить клонирование человека? Неко- торые религии учат, что человеческие существа фундаментально отличны от других млекопитающих и что Бог наде- лил людей бессмертными душами, при- дав им ценность, не сравнимую с ценно- стью других живых существ. Утвержда- ется, что природа человека уникальна и священна. Научные достижения, которые могут изменить эту “природу”, встреча- ют гневный протест. Как бы ни были глубоки догматические корни таких идей, мы спрашиваем, дол- жны ли они учитываться при решении вопроса о том, будет ли позволено лю- дям пользоваться благами новой биотех- нологии. Насколько может судить науч- ная мысль, вид homo sapiens принадле- жит к царству животных. Способности человека, как представляется, только по степени, а не качественно отличаются от способностей высших животных. Богат- ство мыслей, чувств, упований и надежд человечества возникает, по всей видимо- сти, из электрохимических процессов в мозге, а не из нематериальной души, на- личие которой не может обнаружить ни один прибор. Поэтому нынешние деба- ты по поводу клонирования заставляют прежде всего задаться таким вопросом; действительно ли защитники сверхпри- родных или религиозных аргументов имеют достаточно серьезную квалифи- кацию для участия в этих дебатах? Ко- нечно, каждый имеет право быть услы- шанным. Но мы считаем, что существу- ет вполне реальная опасность приоста- новки исследований, несущих огромные потенциальные блага исключительно из- за их конфликта с религиозными верова- ниями некоторых людей. Важно понять, что подобные религиозные возражения уже возникали по поводу вскрытия лю- дей, анестезии, искусственного оплодот- ворения и всей генетической революции наших дней — и, тем не менее, каждое из этих достижений принесло огромные блага. Тот взгляд на природу человека, который коренится в мифическом про- шлом человечества, не должен быть на- шим главным критерием при принятии моральных решений о клонировании. Мы не видим в клонировании высших животных, исключая человека, каких-ли-
490 The Best of Just English бо неразрешимых этических дилемм. He считаем мы очевидным и то, что буду- щие достижения в клонировании чело- веческих тканей и даже человеческих су- ществ создадут моральные затруднения, которые не сможет разрешить человечес- кий разум. Моральные проблемы, порож- даемые клонированием, не крупнее и не глубже тех, с которыми люди уже стал- кивались в связи с развитием таких тех- нологий, как ядерная энергия, рекомби- нантная ДНК или компьютерное моде- лирование. Они просто новые. Исторически выбор луддитов, стремив- шихся повернуть часы истории вспять и ограничить или запретить применение уже существующих технологий, никог- да не был ни реалистическим, ни про- дуктивным. Потенциальные выгоды кло- нирования, возможно, столь велики, что было бы трагедией, если бы древние тео- логические сомнения заставили нас как луддитов его отвергнуть. Мы призываем к последовательному, ответственному развитию технологий клонирования и к самой широкой поддержке гарантий, что традиционалистские и обскурантистские воззрения не станут ненужным препят- ствием на пути полезных научных изыс- каний. Лауреаты Международной академии гуманизма: Курт Воннегут, писатель, США, Сергей Капица, заведующий кафедрой, Московский физико-технический инсти- тут, Россия, Питер Адмираал, доктор медицины, Нидерланды, Рубен Ардилла, психолог, Колумбийский национальный университет, Колумбия, сэр Исайя Берлин, почетный профессор философии, Оксфордский университет, Великобритания, сэр Херман Бонди, член Королевского общества, бывший глава колледжа Черчил- ля, Кембриджский университет, Великобритания, Берн Буллоу, профессор сестринского дела, университет штата Калифорния в Нор- тридже, США, Марио Бунге, профессор философии науки, университет МакГилл, Канада, Бернард Крик, почетный профессор политики, колледж Бирбек, Лондонский уни- верситет, Великобритания, Френсис Крик, лауреат Нобелевской премии по физиологии, институт Солк, США, Ричард Докинз, профессор по восприятию науки обществом, Оксфордский универ- ситет, Великобритания, Хосе Дельгадо, директор Центра нейробиологических исследований, Испания, Пол Эдвардс, профессор философии, Новая школа социальных исследований,США, Энтони Флю, почетный профессор философии, университет Рицинг, Великобрита- ния, Йохан Галтунг, профессор социологии, университет Осло, Норвегия, Адольф Грюнбаум, профессор философии, Питтсбургский университет, США, Херберт Хауптман, лауреат Нобелевской премии, профессор биофизических наук, университет штата Нью-Йорк в Баффало, США, Альберте Идальго Тюньон, президент Философского общества Астурии,Испания,
Clones are Coming 491 Пол Куртц, почетный профессор философии, университет штата Нью-Йорк в Баф- фало, США, Джералд А. Лару, почетный профессор археологии и библейских исследований, Южнокалифорнийский университет в Лос-Анджелесе, США, Телма 3. Лэйвайн, профессор философии, университет Джорджа Мейсона, США, Хосе Лейте Лопес, директор, Бразильский центр физических исследований, Брази- лия, Таслима Насрин, писатель, врач, социальный критик, Бангладеш, Индумати Парикх, реформатор и активист, Индия, Жан-Клод Пекер, почетный профессор астрофизики, Коллеж де Франс, Академия наук, Франция, У.В. Куайн, почетный профессор философии, Гарвардский университет, США, Дж.Дж.С. Смарт, профессор философии, университет Аделаиды, Австралия, В.М. Таркунде, реформатор и активист, Индия, Ричард Тейлор, почетный профессор философии, университет Рочестер, США, Симона Вейль, бывший президент Европейского парламента, Франция, Эдвард О. Уилсон, почетный профессор социобиологии, Гарвардский университет, США Журнал '‘Человек”, No. 3, 1998г.
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Ю.Л. Туманова В.А. Королева-МакАри М.Л. Свешникова Е.В. Тихомирова The Best of Just English Just English. Английский для юристов. Базовый курс Just English. 101 Texts on Law. Для будущих юристов Just English. Clones are Coming. Theories, Facts and Opinions for Discussion Издательство “Зерцало” Лицензия № 004730 от 29 марта 2001 г. Подписано в печать 19.11.2003. Формат 60x90/16. Усл. печ. л. 32,0. Тираж 5000 экз. Заказ № 9099 Отпечатано с готовых диапозитивов в ППП “Типография “НАУКА” 121099, Москва, Шубинский пер., 6 ISBN 5-8078-0096-6 9 785807 80096