Although criminal law can be justified with respect to non-utilitarian goals such as retribution, no one can deny that one way to justify criminal law is with respect to the instrumental ends of deterrence. So, one question of interest to scholars in the field has been how to think about the kinds of criminal law policy that encourage compliance. My own work has focused on this important question. Specifically, I have been concerned with the ways in which different kinds of criminal proscriptions, along with certain methods of law enforcement, could affect crime rates in disadvantaged, urban neighborhoods. In undertaking such analyses, I have emphasized classical sociological theory and social psychology, often for the purpose of criticizin...
In Law and Social Norms, Eric Posner offers an original and important theory of the emergence of nor...
This article is based on the Louis Caplan Lecture delivered by Prof. Allen on April 10, 1981, at the...
Research on procedural justice and legitimacy suggests that compliance with the law is best secured ...
There is an almost heretical disenchantment with law percolating within the legal academy. Conventio...
Professor Eric A. Posner has written a fascinating book about Law and Social Norms. In it, he uses...
Defense Date: 21/09/2009Examining Board: Professor Frederick van der Ploeg, University of Oxford, S...
Law and Social Norms is just what the growing field of norms scholarship needed. Legal scholars have...
In a series of articles I have explained the relevance of sociological theory to crime policy. Speci...
Why people comply with rules, why they contribute to public goods and why they behave prosocially in...
We conducted two studies using a sample of students (Experiment 1, N=84) and the general public (Exp...
The precommitment approach to law enforcement is inappropriate as a positive theory of crime and pun...
Eric Posner\u27s cooperation theory of social norms develops from rational choice theory an austere ...
We conducted two studies using a sample of students (Experiment 1, N=84) and the general public (Exp...
Book synopsis: Questions of legitimacy and issues of compliance lie at the heart of criminal justice...
This article surveys recent works that seek to enrich criminal law policy analysis by incorporating ...
In Law and Social Norms, Eric Posner offers an original and important theory of the emergence of nor...
This article is based on the Louis Caplan Lecture delivered by Prof. Allen on April 10, 1981, at the...
Research on procedural justice and legitimacy suggests that compliance with the law is best secured ...
There is an almost heretical disenchantment with law percolating within the legal academy. Conventio...
Professor Eric A. Posner has written a fascinating book about Law and Social Norms. In it, he uses...
Defense Date: 21/09/2009Examining Board: Professor Frederick van der Ploeg, University of Oxford, S...
Law and Social Norms is just what the growing field of norms scholarship needed. Legal scholars have...
In a series of articles I have explained the relevance of sociological theory to crime policy. Speci...
Why people comply with rules, why they contribute to public goods and why they behave prosocially in...
We conducted two studies using a sample of students (Experiment 1, N=84) and the general public (Exp...
The precommitment approach to law enforcement is inappropriate as a positive theory of crime and pun...
Eric Posner\u27s cooperation theory of social norms develops from rational choice theory an austere ...
We conducted two studies using a sample of students (Experiment 1, N=84) and the general public (Exp...
Book synopsis: Questions of legitimacy and issues of compliance lie at the heart of criminal justice...
This article surveys recent works that seek to enrich criminal law policy analysis by incorporating ...
In Law and Social Norms, Eric Posner offers an original and important theory of the emergence of nor...
This article is based on the Louis Caplan Lecture delivered by Prof. Allen on April 10, 1981, at the...
Research on procedural justice and legitimacy suggests that compliance with the law is best secured ...