Penalties for Officials in Athenian Inscribed Decrees (20 min)
Presenters
Edward Jones, Balliol College, Oxford
Abstract
This paper discusses
penalties for officials recorded in inscribed Athenian laws of the classical
period. At a basic level, it assesses what those penalties can tell us about
Athenian accountability procedures.
The literature on inscribed
penalties for Athenian officials is substantial. In the past decade or so, a
number of scholars have discussed this material. Scafuro provides a detailed
study of the penalties and the procedures via which they were imposed and
exacted. Beretta Liverani and, separately, Blok specifically discuss the habit
of stipulating 10,000 drachmai fines for officials.
An Athenian penchant for
instituting collective penalties (i.e., for entire boards of officials) has
also attracted attention. In their analyses of these penalties, multiple
scholars have applied the so-called law and economics approach associated with
the Chicago school of economics. For instance, Lanni argues that the Athenians
turned to collective penalties to improve deterrence and detection, since they
encouraged individual officials to come forward as whistle-blowers.
A systematic treatment of the
penalties for Athenian officials recorded in inscribed laws is out of the
question. Instead, this twenty-minute paper focuses on collective penalties and
critiques scholars’ use of the law and economics approach. Due to time
constraints, I concentrate mainly on fifth-century examples. In essence, my
argument is that the collective penalty was not simply a functional tool
designed to improve deterrence and detection.
For example, some collective
penalties for Athenian officials occur in inscribed laws that granted
privileges and concessions to certain foreign individuals and subject
communities. In this legislative context, the collective penalty seems to
answer an external (i.e., non-Athenian) concern about the conduct of the
officials. Insisting that each member of a board was to pay a monetary fine
communicated an Athenian willingness and ability to enforce a given concession
or privilege.
Elsewhere, a concentration of
penalties for Athenian officials (which include examples of collective
penalties) occurs in the inscribed decrees regulating the collection and
processing of the tribute. Drawing on jokes from Aristophanic comedy and
additional epigraphic evidence, I argue that the penalties in those decrees
reflect pronounced anxieties about the conduct of councillors and that of other
officials whose duties brought them into contact with foreign envoys. Since the
relevant collective penalties rarely targeted perpetrators of victimless
crimes, I suggest it is anachronistic to view them as functional tools designed
to overcome so-called information deficits.
With respect to the examples
discussed, I focus on a relatively small number of inscribed decrees and their
penalties: e.g., IG I3 61–2 (decrees for Methone and Aphytis); IG
I3 34, 68, and 71 (decrees regulating the collection and processing of
tribute).
AIA-8A