Although punishment has been a crucial feature of every legal system, widespread disagreement exists over the moral principles that can justify its imposition. One fundamental question is why (and whether) the social institution of punishment is warranted. A second question concerns the necessary conditions for punishment in particular cases. A third relates to the degree of severity that is appropriate for particular offenses and offenders. Debates about punishment are important in their own right, but they also raise more general problems about the proper standards for evaluating social practices. The main part of this theoretical overview of the subject of legal punishment concentrates on these issues of justification. That discussion is...
The purpose of this paper is to reflect on the legal and socio-ethical implications of punishment. W...
Criminal law scholarship is marked by a sharp fault line separating substantive criminal law from cr...
The concept of harm and the nature of its proper role in the criminal law has challenged legislators...
Although punishment has been a crucial feature of every legal system, widespread disagreement exists...
The question of crime and punishment has been a subject of great controversy among moral philosopher...
The author refers to the ethics of responsibility and the communicative approach to law and on that...
We maintain that conventional punishment theories obscure what is virtually always at the heart of p...
The question about the sense of punishment entails a question about its empirically--measured effect...
I argue that there is no general justification, meaning a justification that holds across a broad ra...
The purpose of this paper is to reflect on the legal and socio-ethical implications of punishment. W...
This volume critically explores the basis and the goal of punishment from the standpoint of the righ...
What actions should be punished? Should plea-bargaining be allowed? How should sentencing be determi...
There is general acceptance that those who break the law must be punished; however, not all agree as...
In this study I tackle the problem of justifying criminal punishment. Although I take heed of a tra...
In ‘Why Criminal Law: A Question of Content?’, Douglas Husak argues that an analysis of the justifia...
The purpose of this paper is to reflect on the legal and socio-ethical implications of punishment. W...
Criminal law scholarship is marked by a sharp fault line separating substantive criminal law from cr...
The concept of harm and the nature of its proper role in the criminal law has challenged legislators...
Although punishment has been a crucial feature of every legal system, widespread disagreement exists...
The question of crime and punishment has been a subject of great controversy among moral philosopher...
The author refers to the ethics of responsibility and the communicative approach to law and on that...
We maintain that conventional punishment theories obscure what is virtually always at the heart of p...
The question about the sense of punishment entails a question about its empirically--measured effect...
I argue that there is no general justification, meaning a justification that holds across a broad ra...
The purpose of this paper is to reflect on the legal and socio-ethical implications of punishment. W...
This volume critically explores the basis and the goal of punishment from the standpoint of the righ...
What actions should be punished? Should plea-bargaining be allowed? How should sentencing be determi...
There is general acceptance that those who break the law must be punished; however, not all agree as...
In this study I tackle the problem of justifying criminal punishment. Although I take heed of a tra...
In ‘Why Criminal Law: A Question of Content?’, Douglas Husak argues that an analysis of the justifia...
The purpose of this paper is to reflect on the legal and socio-ethical implications of punishment. W...
Criminal law scholarship is marked by a sharp fault line separating substantive criminal law from cr...
The concept of harm and the nature of its proper role in the criminal law has challenged legislators...