In this paper, I will provide a conceptual analysis of the term self-defense and argue that in contrast to the widespread “instrumentalist” account of self-defense, self-defense need not be aimed at averting or mitigating an attack, let alone the harm threatened by it. Instead, on the definition offered here, an act token is self-defense if and only if a) it is directed against an ongoing or imminent attack, and b) the actor correctly believes that the act token is an effective form of resistance or the act token belongs to an act type that usually functions as a means to resist an attack. While resistance is effective in making the attack more difficult, it can often be overcome and therefore does not necessarily stop or mitigate the attac...
The last decade has witnessed increased recourse by states to military force to respond to terrorist...
The law of self-defense has rarely produced as much academic or popular heat as it has in the past t...
THE MORAL INDEFENSIBILITY OF STANDING YOUR GROUND (Abstract) This paper examines...
In this paper, I will provide a conceptual analysis of the term self-defense and argue that in contr...
The rhetoric of self-defense is a powerful instrument in the hands of legal actors to shape our unde...
The rhetoric of self-defense is a powerful instrument in the hands of legal actors to shape our un...
Self-defense and its close relative, defense of others, are uses of force against another person — A...
This paper argues that there is a significant moral difference between force applied against (immine...
This brief essay, written for the Criminal Law Conversations Project, examines whether one can justi...
In this encyclopedia entry, I set forth all of the factors that a complete theory of self-defense mu...
This article critiques traditional formulations of the defense of self-defense which focus upon the ...
There’s a widespread intuition that if the only way an innocent person can stop her villainous attac...
This brief essay, written for the Criminal Law Conversations project, argues that the doctrines of p...
The reasonable person test is often employed in criminal law doctrine as a criterion of cognitive fa...
Theories of self-defence tend to invest heavily in ‘liability justifications’: if the Atta...
The last decade has witnessed increased recourse by states to military force to respond to terrorist...
The law of self-defense has rarely produced as much academic or popular heat as it has in the past t...
THE MORAL INDEFENSIBILITY OF STANDING YOUR GROUND (Abstract) This paper examines...
In this paper, I will provide a conceptual analysis of the term self-defense and argue that in contr...
The rhetoric of self-defense is a powerful instrument in the hands of legal actors to shape our unde...
The rhetoric of self-defense is a powerful instrument in the hands of legal actors to shape our un...
Self-defense and its close relative, defense of others, are uses of force against another person — A...
This paper argues that there is a significant moral difference between force applied against (immine...
This brief essay, written for the Criminal Law Conversations Project, examines whether one can justi...
In this encyclopedia entry, I set forth all of the factors that a complete theory of self-defense mu...
This article critiques traditional formulations of the defense of self-defense which focus upon the ...
There’s a widespread intuition that if the only way an innocent person can stop her villainous attac...
This brief essay, written for the Criminal Law Conversations project, argues that the doctrines of p...
The reasonable person test is often employed in criminal law doctrine as a criterion of cognitive fa...
Theories of self-defence tend to invest heavily in ‘liability justifications’: if the Atta...
The last decade has witnessed increased recourse by states to military force to respond to terrorist...
The law of self-defense has rarely produced as much academic or popular heat as it has in the past t...
THE MORAL INDEFENSIBILITY OF STANDING YOUR GROUND (Abstract) This paper examines...