Stephen Marks provides an interesting exploration of the relation between tort and crime. He tackles a number of difficult issues and raises a variety of interesting questions. Professor Marks works within the social utilitarian tradition as he attempts to use a social utility formulation both to identify the acts a society designates as crimes and to determine the optimal enforcement of the criminal law, specifically, the probability and severity of the punishment society attaches to each crime. Marks\u27s foundational observation is that the categorization decision requires a social utility function that includes the utility of criminal acts while the enforcement decision should exclude the utility generated by the criminal act. The latte...
For most of this century it has been hard to find social scientists who have much confidence in the ...
First paragraph: The main focus of this discussion is on Chapter 7 of Vincent Chiao’s impressive and...
This short paper is a response to Josh Kleinfeld's recent defense of a reconstructivist theory of th...
Stephen Marks provides an interesting exploration of the relation between tort and crime. He tackles...
Perhaps unsurprisingly, Professor Epstein has used the occasion of this Symposium to again voice his...
I thank Kyron Huigens for devoting his time and his considerable talent to responding to my article,...
Criminal law, for much of the nineteenth century and part of the twentieth, was at the forefront of ...
In this Paper, I propose the following two step procedure to explain both the inclusion and exclusio...
Recent years have seen mounting challenge to the model of the criminal trial on the grounds it is no...
The study of sociological aspects of crime is marked by controversy, beginning with definitional iss...
In criminal law circles, the accepted wisdom is that there are two and only two true justifications ...
In this Article I provide an economic analysis of criminal law as a preference-shaping policy. I arg...
The behavioral sciences increasingly call into question the assumption of criminal law\u27s ex ante ...
Economic analyses of criminal law are frequently and heavily criticized for being unable to explain ...
Sociology is the study of society, and it is within society that crimes occur and laws against them ...
For most of this century it has been hard to find social scientists who have much confidence in the ...
First paragraph: The main focus of this discussion is on Chapter 7 of Vincent Chiao’s impressive and...
This short paper is a response to Josh Kleinfeld's recent defense of a reconstructivist theory of th...
Stephen Marks provides an interesting exploration of the relation between tort and crime. He tackles...
Perhaps unsurprisingly, Professor Epstein has used the occasion of this Symposium to again voice his...
I thank Kyron Huigens for devoting his time and his considerable talent to responding to my article,...
Criminal law, for much of the nineteenth century and part of the twentieth, was at the forefront of ...
In this Paper, I propose the following two step procedure to explain both the inclusion and exclusio...
Recent years have seen mounting challenge to the model of the criminal trial on the grounds it is no...
The study of sociological aspects of crime is marked by controversy, beginning with definitional iss...
In criminal law circles, the accepted wisdom is that there are two and only two true justifications ...
In this Article I provide an economic analysis of criminal law as a preference-shaping policy. I arg...
The behavioral sciences increasingly call into question the assumption of criminal law\u27s ex ante ...
Economic analyses of criminal law are frequently and heavily criticized for being unable to explain ...
Sociology is the study of society, and it is within society that crimes occur and laws against them ...
For most of this century it has been hard to find social scientists who have much confidence in the ...
First paragraph: The main focus of this discussion is on Chapter 7 of Vincent Chiao’s impressive and...
This short paper is a response to Josh Kleinfeld's recent defense of a reconstructivist theory of th...