This Article continues our project of applying new findings in the behavioral psychology of human happiness to some of the most deeply analyzed questions in law. When a state decides how to punish criminal offenders, at least one important consideration is the amount of harm any given punishment is likely to inflict. It would be undesirable, for example, to impose greater harm on those who commit less serious crimes or to impose harm that rises to the level of cruelty. Our penal system fits punishments to crimes primarily by adjusting the size of monetary fines and the length of prison terms, but new findings about human adaptability unsettle the assumptions upon which the system rests. Specifically, people adapt well to negative changes in...
In criminal law circles, the accepted wisdom is that there are two and only two true justifications ...
The existence of punishment opportunities has been shown to cause e ¢ ciency in pub-lic goods experi...
Most philosophers believe that wrongdoers sometimes deserve to be punished by long prison sentences....
This Article continues our project of applying new findings in the behavioral psychology of human ha...
This article continues our project to apply groundbreaking new literature on the behavioral psycholo...
In a prior article, we argued that punishment theorists need to take into account the counterintuiti...
The principle of proportionality prescribes that the punishment should equal the crime. It is one of...
Recent developments in brain science confirm that as a race we are in fact a punitive lot. Human bei...
In a series of recent high-profile articles, a group of contemporary scholars argue that the crimina...
The existence of punishment opportunities has been shown to cause efficiency in public goods experim...
Should the punishment fit the criminal as well as the crime? The article argues that idiosyncratic f...
This article considers the possibility of simultaneously reducing crime, prison sentences, and the t...
In this Article, we critique the increasingly prominent claims of Punishment Naturalism—the notion t...
In this Article, we critique the increasingly prominent claims of Punishment Natu- ralism-the notion...
In this article I examine the social desirability of rewarding prisoners for good behavior, either b...
In criminal law circles, the accepted wisdom is that there are two and only two true justifications ...
The existence of punishment opportunities has been shown to cause e ¢ ciency in pub-lic goods experi...
Most philosophers believe that wrongdoers sometimes deserve to be punished by long prison sentences....
This Article continues our project of applying new findings in the behavioral psychology of human ha...
This article continues our project to apply groundbreaking new literature on the behavioral psycholo...
In a prior article, we argued that punishment theorists need to take into account the counterintuiti...
The principle of proportionality prescribes that the punishment should equal the crime. It is one of...
Recent developments in brain science confirm that as a race we are in fact a punitive lot. Human bei...
In a series of recent high-profile articles, a group of contemporary scholars argue that the crimina...
The existence of punishment opportunities has been shown to cause efficiency in public goods experim...
Should the punishment fit the criminal as well as the crime? The article argues that idiosyncratic f...
This article considers the possibility of simultaneously reducing crime, prison sentences, and the t...
In this Article, we critique the increasingly prominent claims of Punishment Naturalism—the notion t...
In this Article, we critique the increasingly prominent claims of Punishment Natu- ralism-the notion...
In this article I examine the social desirability of rewarding prisoners for good behavior, either b...
In criminal law circles, the accepted wisdom is that there are two and only two true justifications ...
The existence of punishment opportunities has been shown to cause e ¢ ciency in pub-lic goods experi...
Most philosophers believe that wrongdoers sometimes deserve to be punished by long prison sentences....