In a comment on Christopher Bennett's The Apology Ritual, I sketch an alternative route to an account of criminal punishment very like Bennett's, though drawing more on a political conception of a polity and its citizens than on a moral conception of our social relations as individuals, and placing more importance than he does on the criminal trial; but I suggest that we need to revise certain important aspects of his account to explain how punishment can be justly imposed on an unwilling offender — in line with the kind of account for which I have argued, and which he criticises
A response to Dan Markel, ' Retributive Justice and the Demands of Democratic Citizenship', which cr...
Incarceration remains the foremost form of sentence for serious crimes in Western democracies. At th...
In this study I tackle the problem of justifying criminal punishment. Although I take heed of a tra...
In a comment on Christopher Bennett's The Apology Ritual, I sketch an alternative route to an accoun...
There is much with which to agree, and to admire, in Bennett’s fine book [Bennett (2008)]:1 in this ...
Duff offered an argument for the conclusion that just or legitimate punishment of socially deprived ...
Abstract: Prisoners’ rights advocates justifiably seek to combat the seemingly ever growing institut...
Most punishment theories acknowledge neither the full extent of the harms which punishment risks, no...
The idea that victims of social injustice who commit crimes ought not to be subject to punishment ha...
The author refers to the ethics of responsibility and the communicative approach to law and on that...
It is sometimes thought that the normative justification for responding to large-scale violations of...
Jonathan Wolff supports retribution as a justification for punishment in his book Ethics and Public ...
According to communicative theories of punishment, legal punishment is pro tanto justified because i...
Incarceration remains the foremost form of sentence for serious crimes in Western democracies. At th...
This is a response to five critiques of my 2018 book The Realm of Criminal Law, by Michelle Dempsey,...
A response to Dan Markel, ' Retributive Justice and the Demands of Democratic Citizenship', which cr...
Incarceration remains the foremost form of sentence for serious crimes in Western democracies. At th...
In this study I tackle the problem of justifying criminal punishment. Although I take heed of a tra...
In a comment on Christopher Bennett's The Apology Ritual, I sketch an alternative route to an accoun...
There is much with which to agree, and to admire, in Bennett’s fine book [Bennett (2008)]:1 in this ...
Duff offered an argument for the conclusion that just or legitimate punishment of socially deprived ...
Abstract: Prisoners’ rights advocates justifiably seek to combat the seemingly ever growing institut...
Most punishment theories acknowledge neither the full extent of the harms which punishment risks, no...
The idea that victims of social injustice who commit crimes ought not to be subject to punishment ha...
The author refers to the ethics of responsibility and the communicative approach to law and on that...
It is sometimes thought that the normative justification for responding to large-scale violations of...
Jonathan Wolff supports retribution as a justification for punishment in his book Ethics and Public ...
According to communicative theories of punishment, legal punishment is pro tanto justified because i...
Incarceration remains the foremost form of sentence for serious crimes in Western democracies. At th...
This is a response to five critiques of my 2018 book The Realm of Criminal Law, by Michelle Dempsey,...
A response to Dan Markel, ' Retributive Justice and the Demands of Democratic Citizenship', which cr...
Incarceration remains the foremost form of sentence for serious crimes in Western democracies. At th...
In this study I tackle the problem of justifying criminal punishment. Although I take heed of a tra...