Blackmail, a wonderfully curious offense, is the favorite of clever criminal law theorists. It criminalizes the threat to do something that would not be criminal if one did it. There exists a rich literature on the issue, with many prominent legal scholars offering their accounts. Each theorist has his own explanation as to why the blackmail offense exists. Most theories seek to justify the position that blackmail is a moral wrong and claim to offer an account that reflects widely shared moral intuitions. But the theories make widely varying assertions about what those shared intuitions are, while also lacking any evidence to support the assertions. This Article summarizes the results of an empirical study designed to test the competing the...
Criminal law, for much of the nineteenth century and part of the twentieth, was at the forefront of ...
We conducted two studies using a sample of students (Experiment 1, N=84) and the general public (Exp...
The majority of research on victim decision making has focused narrowly on reporting to police negle...
Blackmail, a wonderfully curious offense, is the favorite of clever criminal law theorists. It crimi...
This chapter examines the offense of blackmail. It first summarizes the competing theories of blackm...
Blackmail - the wrongful conditional threat to do what would be permissible - presents one of the gr...
Blackmail law can impact on the belief structures (moralisms) and behaviors of both the potential cr...
The ongoing debate about the rationale for punishing blackmail assumes that there is something odd a...
An adequate theoretical justification for the prohibition of blackmail should explain both of its pa...
Blackmail commentary continues to multiply. The purpose of this paper is to show what we agree on. I...
Blackmail commentary continues to proliferate. One purpose of this paper is to show what we agree on...
The paper criticizes criminal law scholarship for helping to construct and failing to expose analyti...
For generations, criminal law theorists, moral and political philosophers, and economists have strug...
In attempting to define the crime of extortion or blackmail, it must be pointed out at the outset th...
Disclosure of true but reputation-damaging information is generally legal. But threats to disclose t...
Criminal law, for much of the nineteenth century and part of the twentieth, was at the forefront of ...
We conducted two studies using a sample of students (Experiment 1, N=84) and the general public (Exp...
The majority of research on victim decision making has focused narrowly on reporting to police negle...
Blackmail, a wonderfully curious offense, is the favorite of clever criminal law theorists. It crimi...
This chapter examines the offense of blackmail. It first summarizes the competing theories of blackm...
Blackmail - the wrongful conditional threat to do what would be permissible - presents one of the gr...
Blackmail law can impact on the belief structures (moralisms) and behaviors of both the potential cr...
The ongoing debate about the rationale for punishing blackmail assumes that there is something odd a...
An adequate theoretical justification for the prohibition of blackmail should explain both of its pa...
Blackmail commentary continues to multiply. The purpose of this paper is to show what we agree on. I...
Blackmail commentary continues to proliferate. One purpose of this paper is to show what we agree on...
The paper criticizes criminal law scholarship for helping to construct and failing to expose analyti...
For generations, criminal law theorists, moral and political philosophers, and economists have strug...
In attempting to define the crime of extortion or blackmail, it must be pointed out at the outset th...
Disclosure of true but reputation-damaging information is generally legal. But threats to disclose t...
Criminal law, for much of the nineteenth century and part of the twentieth, was at the forefront of ...
We conducted two studies using a sample of students (Experiment 1, N=84) and the general public (Exp...
The majority of research on victim decision making has focused narrowly on reporting to police negle...