What ethos is appropriate to the modern act of criminal judgment? in the long history of the criminal trial, passing judgment on the accused was, for the adjudicator, a fearful act filled with the ologically inspired anxiety. This paper argues that, despite the contemporary attenuation of this specific form of anxiety, criminal judgment ought still to be infused with a due sense of the perils associated with passing legal and moral judgment upon another. This piece considers Justice Bertha Wilson’s criminal law jurisprudence, arguing that, apart from her substantive contributions, her legacy in this field is to embody an adjudicative ethos and posture conditioned by a keen appreciation of the limits and dangers of criminal adjudication.A cl...
This thesis examines the role of emotion in the criminal law. It identifies the current understandi...
The following article is an edited, abridged version of a piece that originally appeared in Mercer L...
The struggle for justice is commonly articulated in literature and drama through metaphors of physic...
What ethos is appropriate to the modern act of criminal judgment? In the long history of the crimina...
Book review of "The Origins of Reasonable Doubt: Theological Roots of the Criminal Trial" by James Q...
In this perspective piece, the author attacks the notion of moral involuntariness in the Supreme C...
Justice, according to a broad consensus of our greatest twentieth century judges, requires a particu...
Judging requires applying the law instead of personal morals, philosophy, or policy of the community...
In their book, Practical Wisdom: The Right Way to Do the Right Thing, Barry Schwartz and Kenneth Sha...
Abstract Anger, its part in human conduct and in crime commission has been much discussed and acc...
Emotions are ubiquitous in criminal law, as they are in life. But how do they, and how should they, ...
This article reviews Moral Judgment: Does the Abuse Excuse Threaten Our Legal System? by James Q. Wi...
What, if any, is the conceptual relationship between the constitutional protection of religious cons...
What would a jurisprudence of sentencing that was induced from the experience of punishment, rather ...
To understand Fear of Judging and the debate over the Federal Sentencing Guidelines requires some fa...
This thesis examines the role of emotion in the criminal law. It identifies the current understandi...
The following article is an edited, abridged version of a piece that originally appeared in Mercer L...
The struggle for justice is commonly articulated in literature and drama through metaphors of physic...
What ethos is appropriate to the modern act of criminal judgment? In the long history of the crimina...
Book review of "The Origins of Reasonable Doubt: Theological Roots of the Criminal Trial" by James Q...
In this perspective piece, the author attacks the notion of moral involuntariness in the Supreme C...
Justice, according to a broad consensus of our greatest twentieth century judges, requires a particu...
Judging requires applying the law instead of personal morals, philosophy, or policy of the community...
In their book, Practical Wisdom: The Right Way to Do the Right Thing, Barry Schwartz and Kenneth Sha...
Abstract Anger, its part in human conduct and in crime commission has been much discussed and acc...
Emotions are ubiquitous in criminal law, as they are in life. But how do they, and how should they, ...
This article reviews Moral Judgment: Does the Abuse Excuse Threaten Our Legal System? by James Q. Wi...
What, if any, is the conceptual relationship between the constitutional protection of religious cons...
What would a jurisprudence of sentencing that was induced from the experience of punishment, rather ...
To understand Fear of Judging and the debate over the Federal Sentencing Guidelines requires some fa...
This thesis examines the role of emotion in the criminal law. It identifies the current understandi...
The following article is an edited, abridged version of a piece that originally appeared in Mercer L...
The struggle for justice is commonly articulated in literature and drama through metaphors of physic...