The reasonable person standard is used in adjudicating claims of self-defence. In US law, an individual may use defensive force if her beliefs that a threat is imminent and that force is required are beliefs that a reasonable person would have. In English law, it is sufficient that beliefs in imminence and necessity are genuinely held; but the reasonableness of so believing is given an evidential role in establishing the genuineness of the beliefs. There is, of course, much contention over how to spell out when, and in virtue of what, such beliefs are reasonable. In this chapter, we identify some distinctive issues that arise when we consider that implicit racial bias might be implicated in the beliefs in imminence and necessity. Considerin...
This article critiques traditional formulations of the defense of self-defense which focus upon the ...
How should the law respond when one person (D) kills another person (V), who is black, because D bel...
I argue that inferences from highly probabilifying racial generalizations (e.g. believing that Jones...
The reasonable person standard is used in adjudicating claims of self-defence. In US law, an individ...
One of the ways in which our legal system maintains legitimacy is through its claim to objectivity. ...
This paper examines the influence of racial stereotypes on juror determinations of reasonableness in...
This paper attempts to understand the objections to the reasonable person standard in the criminal l...
The reasonable person test is often employed in criminal law doctrine as a criterion of cognitive fa...
This article focuses on the objective reasonable person standard in criminal law through the context...
Stand Your Ground laws give jurors too much leeway in determining what constitutes a reasonable thre...
This book examines the influence of masculinity, heterosexuality, and race norms on the reasonablene...
When courts invoke the reasonable person as a means to assess culpability, they attribute to the sta...
In her recently published book, Murder and the Reasonable Man: Passion and Fear in the Criminal Cour...
When is homicide reasonable? That familiar, yet unanswered question continues to intrigue both court...
The doctrine of self-defense evaluates the reasonableness of criminality judgments. Yet, it fails to...
This article critiques traditional formulations of the defense of self-defense which focus upon the ...
How should the law respond when one person (D) kills another person (V), who is black, because D bel...
I argue that inferences from highly probabilifying racial generalizations (e.g. believing that Jones...
The reasonable person standard is used in adjudicating claims of self-defence. In US law, an individ...
One of the ways in which our legal system maintains legitimacy is through its claim to objectivity. ...
This paper examines the influence of racial stereotypes on juror determinations of reasonableness in...
This paper attempts to understand the objections to the reasonable person standard in the criminal l...
The reasonable person test is often employed in criminal law doctrine as a criterion of cognitive fa...
This article focuses on the objective reasonable person standard in criminal law through the context...
Stand Your Ground laws give jurors too much leeway in determining what constitutes a reasonable thre...
This book examines the influence of masculinity, heterosexuality, and race norms on the reasonablene...
When courts invoke the reasonable person as a means to assess culpability, they attribute to the sta...
In her recently published book, Murder and the Reasonable Man: Passion and Fear in the Criminal Cour...
When is homicide reasonable? That familiar, yet unanswered question continues to intrigue both court...
The doctrine of self-defense evaluates the reasonableness of criminality judgments. Yet, it fails to...
This article critiques traditional formulations of the defense of self-defense which focus upon the ...
How should the law respond when one person (D) kills another person (V), who is black, because D bel...
I argue that inferences from highly probabilifying racial generalizations (e.g. believing that Jones...