Civil death
Template:Short description Civil death (Template:Langx)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> is the loss of all or almost all civil rights by a person due to a conviction for a felony or due to an act by the government of a country that results in the loss of civil rights. It is usually inflicted on persons convicted of crimes against the state or adults determined by a court to be legally incompetent because of mental disability.<ref>See e.g. Interdiction of F.T.E., 594 So.2d 480 (La. App. 2d Cir. 1992).</ref>
Medieval Europe
In medieval Europe, felons lost all civil rights upon their conviction. This civil death often led to actual death, since anyone could kill and injure a felon with impunity.<ref name="felons">Template:Cite journal</ref> Under the Holy Roman Empire, a person declared civilly dead was referred to as vogelfrei ('free as a bird') and could even be killed since they were completely outside the law.<ref name="Death, Civil page 138">Article "Death, Civil;" Encyclopædia Americana, 1830 ed, page 138</ref>
Historically outlawry, that is, declaring a person as an outlaw, was a common form of civil death.<ref name="Death, Civil page 138"/>
Under early English common law a living person could under certain conditions be considered legally dead. The three categories generally recognized as resulting in civil death were profession ("monastery death"), abjuration, and banishment.Template:Sfn
United States
In the U.S., the disenfranchisement of felons<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> has been called a form of civil death, as has being subjected to collateral consequences in general. The contention is not generally supported by legal scholars.<ref>Gabriel J. Chin, The New Civil Death: Rethinking Punishment in the Era of Mass Conviction, 160 U. Penn. L. Rev. 1789 (2012)</ref> Civil death as such remains part of the law in New York, Rhode Island, and the Virgin Islands.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
China
In China, the concept of civil death is embodied in the punishment known as "Deprivation of Political Rights" (Chinese: Template:Lang), as outlined in Part One, Section 7 of the Criminal Law. The deprivation starts from the date on which imprisonment or criminal detention ends or from the date on which parole begins. Deprivation of political rights shall, as a matter of course, be in effect during the period in which the principal punishment is being executed. While the duration is usually issued between one to five years, Article 57 establishes that individuals sentenced to death or life imprisonment are automatically stripped of their political rights for life. If such sentences are later commuted to fixed-term imprisonment, the deprivation period is adjusted to a range of three to ten years. Political rights are defined in the Criminal Law as:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- the right to vote and to stand for election;
- the rights of freedom of speech, of the press, of assembly, of association, of procession, and of demonstration;
- the right to hold a position in a state organization; and
- the right to hold a leading position in any state-owned company, enterprise, institution or people's organization.
See also
- Disfranchisement
- Loss of rights due to felony conviction
- Sex offender registries in the United States
- Social death
- Ghosts… of the Civil Dead
- Homo Sacer, a similar status in ancient Roman Law