This article identifies two mistakes commonly made about the concept of punishment. First, confusion exists about when an analysis of punishment counts as retributive, and when as justificatorily neutral. In particular, a fair number of legal scholars claim to analyze punishment in a neutral way, but closer inspection shows that many of these definitions are not justificatorily neutral. Second, legal scholars tend to analyze the concept of punishment very restrictively, with a focus on the intention of the legislator. While there may be good reasons to restrict the scope of the concept of punishment in the legal arena, from a philosophical point of view, restrictive analysis is not fruitful. It is a bad starting point for critical evaluatio...
This volume critically explores the basis and the goal of punishment from the standpoint of the righ...
Recent trends in crime control have given new energy to an age-old question, namely what kinds of ac...
Many philosophers take it that the aim of a philosophical account of punishment is that of justifyin...
The one thing that most scholars of criminal law agree upon is that we are in desperate need of a co...
We maintain that conventional punishment theories obscure what is virtually always at the heart of p...
Although punishment has been a crucial feature of every legal system, widespread disagreement exists...
What actions should be punished? Should plea-bargaining be allowed? How should sentencing be determi...
In this essay, I raise a complex and contentious question: what is the role of punishment in a resto...
Punitive, or exemplary damages, have been recognized in the Anglo-American common law systems for tw...
Many criminal law theorists find the punishment of harm puzzling. They argue that acts should be eva...
This article argues that the justification of punishment is best conceived as a problem of political...
In this Article, we critique the increasingly prominent claims of Punishment Naturalism—the notion t...
The United States Supreme Court has repeatedly insisted that what distinguishes a criminal punishmen...
First paragraph: Brooks offers a critical survey of different normative theories of punishment, find...
Constitutional orders punish — and they punish abundantly. However, analysis of the constitutionalit...
This volume critically explores the basis and the goal of punishment from the standpoint of the righ...
Recent trends in crime control have given new energy to an age-old question, namely what kinds of ac...
Many philosophers take it that the aim of a philosophical account of punishment is that of justifyin...
The one thing that most scholars of criminal law agree upon is that we are in desperate need of a co...
We maintain that conventional punishment theories obscure what is virtually always at the heart of p...
Although punishment has been a crucial feature of every legal system, widespread disagreement exists...
What actions should be punished? Should plea-bargaining be allowed? How should sentencing be determi...
In this essay, I raise a complex and contentious question: what is the role of punishment in a resto...
Punitive, or exemplary damages, have been recognized in the Anglo-American common law systems for tw...
Many criminal law theorists find the punishment of harm puzzling. They argue that acts should be eva...
This article argues that the justification of punishment is best conceived as a problem of political...
In this Article, we critique the increasingly prominent claims of Punishment Naturalism—the notion t...
The United States Supreme Court has repeatedly insisted that what distinguishes a criminal punishmen...
First paragraph: Brooks offers a critical survey of different normative theories of punishment, find...
Constitutional orders punish — and they punish abundantly. However, analysis of the constitutionalit...
This volume critically explores the basis and the goal of punishment from the standpoint of the righ...
Recent trends in crime control have given new energy to an age-old question, namely what kinds of ac...
Many philosophers take it that the aim of a philosophical account of punishment is that of justifyin...