In this short response, I address some of the general themes that have been raised by the commentators. I discuss these under three main heads. These are, first, the relationship between descriptive and normative accounts of the criminal law; second, the meaning of civil order and its place in my argument, and; third, an explanation for my focus on certain types of offenses in the analysis of the special part of the criminal law
What distinguishes “criminal law” from all other law? This question should be central to both crimin...
In the United States today criminal justice can vary from state to state, as various states alter th...
Criminal law scholarship is marked by a sharp fault line separating substantive criminal law from cr...
In this short response, I address some of the general themes that have been raised by the commentat...
This is a response to ten critiques of my 2018 book The Realm of Criminal Law, by Stephen Bero and A...
This brief review essay is devoted to a discussion of Lindsay Farmer’s recent book, Making the Moder...
In this short contribution, I intend to briefly discuss what I consider to be some of the most impor...
A synopsis of the criminal law as decided by our appellate courts consists, in the main, of a restat...
Recent years have seen mounting challenge to the model of the criminal trial on the grounds it is no...
The following essay discusses abuse offenses as a means to explore and criticize Lindsay Farmer’s Ma...
T ODAY\u27S reappraisal of our criminal law was the subject suggested to me asappropriate for the th...
This article explores the meaning of the term ‘civil order’ by asking what it means to claim that cr...
First paragraph: Philosophical (as distinct from sociological or historical) theories of criminal la...
In order to understand criminal legislation, one needs to refocus from criminal legislation to its m...
Confronting criminal law’s violence calls for an openness to unfinished alternatives — a willingness...
What distinguishes “criminal law” from all other law? This question should be central to both crimin...
In the United States today criminal justice can vary from state to state, as various states alter th...
Criminal law scholarship is marked by a sharp fault line separating substantive criminal law from cr...
In this short response, I address some of the general themes that have been raised by the commentat...
This is a response to ten critiques of my 2018 book The Realm of Criminal Law, by Stephen Bero and A...
This brief review essay is devoted to a discussion of Lindsay Farmer’s recent book, Making the Moder...
In this short contribution, I intend to briefly discuss what I consider to be some of the most impor...
A synopsis of the criminal law as decided by our appellate courts consists, in the main, of a restat...
Recent years have seen mounting challenge to the model of the criminal trial on the grounds it is no...
The following essay discusses abuse offenses as a means to explore and criticize Lindsay Farmer’s Ma...
T ODAY\u27S reappraisal of our criminal law was the subject suggested to me asappropriate for the th...
This article explores the meaning of the term ‘civil order’ by asking what it means to claim that cr...
First paragraph: Philosophical (as distinct from sociological or historical) theories of criminal la...
In order to understand criminal legislation, one needs to refocus from criminal legislation to its m...
Confronting criminal law’s violence calls for an openness to unfinished alternatives — a willingness...
What distinguishes “criminal law” from all other law? This question should be central to both crimin...
In the United States today criminal justice can vary from state to state, as various states alter th...
Criminal law scholarship is marked by a sharp fault line separating substantive criminal law from cr...