Law and neuroscience is approaching an inflection point. It has been roughly ten years since the New York Times Magazine put neurolaw on its cover, since Stanford neuroscientist Robert Sapolsky wrote his seminal article, “The Frontal Cortex and the Criminal Justice System”; and since law professor Adam Kolber taught the first law and neuroscience course. The MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Law and Neuroscience, which has been one of the epicenters of the field over this same period, will wind down its primary research projects soon. So what comes next? In this Article, I sketch out a vision for “Law and Neuroscience 2.0.” Neurolaw has built a solid foundation for a lasting intellectual and policy endeavor. But to realize the promis...
Today the world is in a time of change where values, attitudes, and thought paradigms are changing. ...
Neurolaw, as an interdisciplinary field which links the brain to law, facilitates the pathway to bet...
This book aims to contribute to the ongoing debate on neuroscience, justice, and security, by exami...
In a 2002 editorial published in The Economist, the following warning was given: “Genetics may yet t...
This provides the Summary Table of Contents and Chapter 1 of our coursebook “Law and Neuroscience” (...
There are different definitions of neurolaw in circulation, but it is essentially an umbrella term f...
In recent years there has been increasing interest in the relation of neuroscience and the law. Far ...
Neuroscience and law (in brief ‘Neurolaw’) is one of the most exciting recent developments at the in...
Neurolaw, the inter-disciplinary study of neuroscience and law, establishes a relationship of Brain ...
I was asked to speculate about where the field of Law and Neuroscience may be ten years from now. In...
The intersection between law and neuroscience has been a focus of intense research for the past deca...
In a 2002 editorial published in The Economist, the following warning was given: Genetics may yet t...
This chapter addresses the potential contributions of neuroscience to legal policy in general and cr...
This Article, part of a symposium on neuroscience and the law at Fordham Law School, argues that the...
Some of the implications for law of recent discoveries in neuroscience are considered in a new progr...
Today the world is in a time of change where values, attitudes, and thought paradigms are changing. ...
Neurolaw, as an interdisciplinary field which links the brain to law, facilitates the pathway to bet...
This book aims to contribute to the ongoing debate on neuroscience, justice, and security, by exami...
In a 2002 editorial published in The Economist, the following warning was given: “Genetics may yet t...
This provides the Summary Table of Contents and Chapter 1 of our coursebook “Law and Neuroscience” (...
There are different definitions of neurolaw in circulation, but it is essentially an umbrella term f...
In recent years there has been increasing interest in the relation of neuroscience and the law. Far ...
Neuroscience and law (in brief ‘Neurolaw’) is one of the most exciting recent developments at the in...
Neurolaw, the inter-disciplinary study of neuroscience and law, establishes a relationship of Brain ...
I was asked to speculate about where the field of Law and Neuroscience may be ten years from now. In...
The intersection between law and neuroscience has been a focus of intense research for the past deca...
In a 2002 editorial published in The Economist, the following warning was given: Genetics may yet t...
This chapter addresses the potential contributions of neuroscience to legal policy in general and cr...
This Article, part of a symposium on neuroscience and the law at Fordham Law School, argues that the...
Some of the implications for law of recent discoveries in neuroscience are considered in a new progr...
Today the world is in a time of change where values, attitudes, and thought paradigms are changing. ...
Neurolaw, as an interdisciplinary field which links the brain to law, facilitates the pathway to bet...
This book aims to contribute to the ongoing debate on neuroscience, justice, and security, by exami...