This dissertation offers an account of the moral permissibility of criminal punishment. Punishment presents a distinctive moral challenge in that it involves a community’s inflicting harm on individuals, treating them in ways that would typically be morally wrong. We can distinguish a number of different questions of punishment’s permissibility. This dissertation focuses on four central questions:: 1) Why may we punish? Why is it in principle permissible to inflict harm on criminal offenders?: 2) Why should we punish? Is there a compelling reason to do so?: 3) How may we punish? What principles should constrain impositions of punishment? And finally,: 4) who is properly subject to punishment? Rather than expect to answer all of these questi...
The U.S. Penal System is known to be one of the most punitive punishment systems in the world. Many ...
My dissertation is an investigation into the nature, grounds and limits of what might be called soci...
We maintain that conventional punishment theories obscure what is virtually always at the heart of p...
In the dissertation, I consider the permissibility of a familiar set of responses to wrongdoing in o...
Although punishment has been a crucial feature of every legal system, widespread disagreement exists...
It is a fact of daily life that individuals punish other individuals for harms or offences that are ...
textThis dissertation explores public attitudes towards criminal punishment in Western societies and...
Most punishment theories acknowledge neither the full extent of the harms which punishment risks, no...
The question of crime and punishment has been a subject of great controversy among moral philosopher...
If we want to provide a justification for legal punishment, then, we must answer two distinct questi...
The purpose of this paper is to reflect on the legal and socio-ethical implications of punishment. W...
This paper attempts to justify punishment on the grounds that it is a benefit to the person being pu...
The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the contemporary criminal justice system in the United Stat...
This lecture was delivered at the University of Akron School of Law on April 1, 2004...Today I want ...
The concept of harm and the nature of its proper role in the criminal law has challenged legislators...
The U.S. Penal System is known to be one of the most punitive punishment systems in the world. Many ...
My dissertation is an investigation into the nature, grounds and limits of what might be called soci...
We maintain that conventional punishment theories obscure what is virtually always at the heart of p...
In the dissertation, I consider the permissibility of a familiar set of responses to wrongdoing in o...
Although punishment has been a crucial feature of every legal system, widespread disagreement exists...
It is a fact of daily life that individuals punish other individuals for harms or offences that are ...
textThis dissertation explores public attitudes towards criminal punishment in Western societies and...
Most punishment theories acknowledge neither the full extent of the harms which punishment risks, no...
The question of crime and punishment has been a subject of great controversy among moral philosopher...
If we want to provide a justification for legal punishment, then, we must answer two distinct questi...
The purpose of this paper is to reflect on the legal and socio-ethical implications of punishment. W...
This paper attempts to justify punishment on the grounds that it is a benefit to the person being pu...
The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the contemporary criminal justice system in the United Stat...
This lecture was delivered at the University of Akron School of Law on April 1, 2004...Today I want ...
The concept of harm and the nature of its proper role in the criminal law has challenged legislators...
The U.S. Penal System is known to be one of the most punitive punishment systems in the world. Many ...
My dissertation is an investigation into the nature, grounds and limits of what might be called soci...
We maintain that conventional punishment theories obscure what is virtually always at the heart of p...