The prospect of preventing crime before it occurs has long preoccupied scholars of criminal policy. Within the traditional framework of criminal justice, justice is inherently delayed, arriving only after harm has been inflicted and serving as a retrospective “settlement of accounts” amid the aftermath. The increasing prevalence of covert commercial bribery and sophisticated financial fraud has exposed the limitations of this reactive model. In response to these challenges, China’s Social Credit System (SCS) has emerged, proposing a potential “pre-crime revolution” and a new possibility that aims to transcend conventional temporal boundaries. Based on publicly available documents and existing scholarship, this note examines both the appeal and the potential alienation associated with the SCS as a proactive crime prevention mechanism. In contrast to conventional criminal law, which addresses specific acts, the credit system targets individuals by constructing risk profiles through comprehensive data integration and implementing joint punishment measures such as restricting capital, blocking market access, and limiting mobility. These strategies aim to eliminate the capacity to offend before criminal intent can manifest. The SCS thus represents the realization of the pre-emptive neutralization envisioned by the risk society, embodying the aspiration for a precision mechanism capable of intercepting sophisticated crime at its source. However, the pursuit of a risk-minimization logic raises concerns regarding the boundaries of preventive intervention. As preventive measures expand, there is a risk that citizens may be redefined as subjects of ongoing risk evaluation within a data-driven system. While the system’s significant deterrent effect is acknowledged, this note, drawing on labelling theory and principles of legal restraint, addresses a central dilemma: how can a society seeking a “secure utopia” prevent preventive logic from evolving into a system of permanent exclusion that precludes the possibility of rehabilitation?
Lu SUN (Mon,) studied this question.