This article offers a critical analysis of the traditional maxim that motive is irrelevant to criminal liability. It retraces the history of this principle to show how its meaning has changed and its validity has declined over time. Originally promoted by reformers, the irrelevance of motive maxim derived meaning from their efforts to codify criminal law. In this context, the irrelevance of motive stood for two related reforms: (1) legislators should condition criminal liability on expectations of harm rather than desires, and (2) courts should require proof of statutory mental elements. With the success of codification, however, the irrelevance of motive maxim has fragmented into two different propositions, one lacking authority, and one l...
Contemporary American Criminal Law, as represented by the American Law Institute's Model Penal Code,...
Anglo-American criminal law traditionally demands a criminal purpose for an attempt conviction, even...
Criminal law, reflecting widely accepted act theory, typically holds that responsibility depends o...
This article offers a critical analysis of the traditional maxim that motive is irrelevant to crimin...
The irrelevance-of-motive maxim-the longstanding principle that a defendant\u27s motives are irrelev...
The lack of unanimity on the motive understanding by psychologists studying the motivation of goal-o...
The comment begins with a story about an attack that took place against a homosexual where the attac...
Forget dogs: do people distinguish between being stumbled over and being kicked? Assessments of inte...
I will discuss the wonderful interrelation between intent, purpose and motivation. I have always lov...
Constitutional questions about hate crime laws in the United States were settled in the early 1990s....
The conventional view is that a result is intended if it is motivationally significant - i.e., if it...
The article is devoted to the analysis of the subjective side of the criminal offense under Art. 375...
The United States Supreme Court has repeatedly insisted that what distinguishes a criminal punishmen...
The article analyzes scientific approaches to the analysis of the subjective side of fraud. The sub...
Around the concept criminal intent, as used in the criminallaw, some of the most intensive battles...
Contemporary American Criminal Law, as represented by the American Law Institute's Model Penal Code,...
Anglo-American criminal law traditionally demands a criminal purpose for an attempt conviction, even...
Criminal law, reflecting widely accepted act theory, typically holds that responsibility depends o...
This article offers a critical analysis of the traditional maxim that motive is irrelevant to crimin...
The irrelevance-of-motive maxim-the longstanding principle that a defendant\u27s motives are irrelev...
The lack of unanimity on the motive understanding by psychologists studying the motivation of goal-o...
The comment begins with a story about an attack that took place against a homosexual where the attac...
Forget dogs: do people distinguish between being stumbled over and being kicked? Assessments of inte...
I will discuss the wonderful interrelation between intent, purpose and motivation. I have always lov...
Constitutional questions about hate crime laws in the United States were settled in the early 1990s....
The conventional view is that a result is intended if it is motivationally significant - i.e., if it...
The article is devoted to the analysis of the subjective side of the criminal offense under Art. 375...
The United States Supreme Court has repeatedly insisted that what distinguishes a criminal punishmen...
The article analyzes scientific approaches to the analysis of the subjective side of fraud. The sub...
Around the concept criminal intent, as used in the criminallaw, some of the most intensive battles...
Contemporary American Criminal Law, as represented by the American Law Institute's Model Penal Code,...
Anglo-American criminal law traditionally demands a criminal purpose for an attempt conviction, even...
Criminal law, reflecting widely accepted act theory, typically holds that responsibility depends o...