Punishment Torture for punishment dates back to antiquity and is still employed in the twenty-first century. A common practice in countries with dysfunctional justice systems or overcrowded prisons is for police to apprehend suspects, torture them, and release them without a charge. Such torture could be performed in a police station, the victim's home, or a public place. In South Africa, the police have been observed handing suspects over to
vigilantes to be tortured. This type of extrajudicial violence is often carried out in public as a form of
social control to deter others. It discriminatorily targets minorities and marginalized groups and may be supported by the public, especially if people do not trust the official justice system.
Judicial corporal punishment was initially excepted from the UN definition of torture, which "does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to lawful sanctions", although it is explicitly prohibited under the
Geneva Conventions. From the 1990s, courts increasingly recognized it as a form of torture, although this norm has met opposition from practitioners of
Islamic law and other traditional justice practices. Capital punishment is an extreme form of corporal punishment and its use has become increasingly circumscribed. Certain methods of execution have been banned as tortuous, and the
psychological harm of capital punishment has also been recognized as torture. Others do not consider corporal punishment with a fixed penalty to be torture, as it does not seek to break the victim's will.
Deterrence protestor injured by riot police Torture may also be used indiscriminately to terrorize people other than the direct victim or to deter opposition to the government.
In the United States, torture was used to deter
slaves from escaping or rebelling. Some defenders of judicial torture prior to its abolition argued that it deterred crime; reformers contended that because torture was carried out in secret, it could not be an effective deterrent. Authoritarian regimes often resort to indiscriminate repression because they cannot accurately identify potential opponents. Many insurgencies lack the necessary infrastructure for a torture program and instead intimidate by killing. Research has found that state torture can extend the lifespan of terrorist organizations, increase incentives for insurgents to use violence, and radicalize the opposition. In the twentieth century, well-known examples include the
Khmer Rouge and anti-communist regimes in Latin America, who tortured and murdered their victims as part of
forced disappearance.
Ba'athist Syria's massive torture program existed to eliminate dissent and for perpetrators to show loyalty to the regime, although all evidence indicates it did not reduce political opposition. Several torture researchers have argued that
torture is used by Israel to dominate and terrorize Palestinians, particularly during the
Gaza genocide Another form of torture for deterrence is violence against migrants, as has been reported during
pushbacks on the European Union's external borders.
Confession Torture has been used throughout history to extract confessions from detainees. In 1764, Italian reformer
Cesare Beccaria denounced torture as "a sure way to acquit robust scoundrels and to condemn weak but innocent people". Similar doubts about torture's effectiveness had been voiced for centuries previously, including by
Aristotle. Despite the abolition of judicial torture, it sees continued use to elicit confessions, especially in judicial systems placing a high value on confessions in criminal matters. The use of torture to force suspects to confess is facilitated by laws allowing extensive
pre-trial detention. Research has found that coercive interrogation is slightly more effective than
cognitive interviewing for extracting a confession from a suspect, but presents a higher risk of false confession. Many torture victims will say whatever the torturer wants to hear to end the torture. Others who are guilty refuse to confess, especially if they believe it would only bring more torture or punishment. Medieval justice systems attempted to counteract the risk of false confession under torture by requiring confessors to provide
falsifiable details about the crime, and only allowing torture if there was already some evidence against the accused. In some countries, political opponents are tortured to force them to confess publicly as a form of
state propaganda.
Interrogation ese soldier
waterboard a captured
North Vietnamese prisoner of war near
Da Nang, 1968. The use of torture to obtain information during interrogation accounts for a small percentage of worldwide torture cases; its use for obtaining confessions or intimidation is more common. Although interrogational torture has been used in
conventional wars, it is even more common in
asymmetric war or civil wars. The
ticking time bomb scenario is extremely rare, if not impossible, but is cited to justify torture for interrogation.
Fictional portrayals of torture as an effective interrogational method have fueled misconceptions that justify the use of torture. Experiments comparing torture with other interrogation methods cannot be performed for ethical and practical reasons. Most scholars of torture are skeptical about its efficacy in obtaining accurate information, while others hold that it is impossible to know its effectiveness, and in some cases actionable intelligence has been obtained. Interrogational torture can often shade into confessional torture or simply into entertainment, and some torturers do not distinguish between interrogation and confession. Although skeptical of some criticisms of torture, Ron E. Hassner argues that to be effective torture must be planned and drawn out. "Our society would have to acquiesce to a massive bureaucratized torture campaign, at times of peace or war, that targeted thousands, from all walks of life, regardless of culpability, in order to extract modest intelligence that was, at best, corroborative." == Methods ==