This article addresses the state's police power authority to deprive people of liberty based on predictions of antisocial behavior. Most conspicuously exercised against so-called "sexual predators," this authority purportedly justifies a wide array of other state interventions as well, ranging from police stops to executions. Yet there still is no general theory of preventive detention. This article is a preliminary effort in that regard. The article first surveys the various objections to preventive detention: the unreliability objection; the punishment-in-disguise objection; the legality objection; and the dehumanization objection. None of these objections justifies a complete prohibition on the state's power to detain people based on dan...
In this article opinions on the issue of exceeding the limits of the necessary measures to detain a ...
Most of the scholarly reaction to systems of preventive detention has been hostile. Negative judgmen...
Over the past fifty years the Supreme Court has been repeatedly asked to address the constitutionali...
This article addresses the state\u27s police power authority to deprive people of liberty based on p...
How to respond justly to the dangers persistent violent offenders present is a vexing moral and lega...
Laypersons have traditionally thought of the criminal justice system as being in the business of doi...
Preventing future crime has become an increasingly dominant function of the criminal law of many lib...
The traditional approaches to dangerous persons have been crime and commitment. The criminal law pun...
This Article will address four major substantive constitutional and moral challenges to the Washingt...
This article explores the jurisprudential and practical feasibility of a "preventive" regime of crim...
Since 1970, legislatures have increasingly relied on preventive detention – detention before trial o...
This contribution to a symposium on the morality of preventive restriction on liberty begins by desc...
The specific focus of this paper is on the Dangerous Offender provisions in Part XXI of our Criminal...
How dangerous must a person be to justify the state in locking her up for the greater good? The bail...
Only “dangerous” individuals may be indefinitely detained. Is a one percent chance of a future crime...
In this article opinions on the issue of exceeding the limits of the necessary measures to detain a ...
Most of the scholarly reaction to systems of preventive detention has been hostile. Negative judgmen...
Over the past fifty years the Supreme Court has been repeatedly asked to address the constitutionali...
This article addresses the state\u27s police power authority to deprive people of liberty based on p...
How to respond justly to the dangers persistent violent offenders present is a vexing moral and lega...
Laypersons have traditionally thought of the criminal justice system as being in the business of doi...
Preventing future crime has become an increasingly dominant function of the criminal law of many lib...
The traditional approaches to dangerous persons have been crime and commitment. The criminal law pun...
This Article will address four major substantive constitutional and moral challenges to the Washingt...
This article explores the jurisprudential and practical feasibility of a "preventive" regime of crim...
Since 1970, legislatures have increasingly relied on preventive detention – detention before trial o...
This contribution to a symposium on the morality of preventive restriction on liberty begins by desc...
The specific focus of this paper is on the Dangerous Offender provisions in Part XXI of our Criminal...
How dangerous must a person be to justify the state in locking her up for the greater good? The bail...
Only “dangerous” individuals may be indefinitely detained. Is a one percent chance of a future crime...
In this article opinions on the issue of exceeding the limits of the necessary measures to detain a ...
Most of the scholarly reaction to systems of preventive detention has been hostile. Negative judgmen...
Over the past fifty years the Supreme Court has been repeatedly asked to address the constitutionali...