This essay explores the case against strict liability offenses as part of the more general debate about proportional punishment. This debate takes on a very different look in light of a formal result derived by the authors elsewhere, that is briefly summarized and whose implications are pursued here. Traditional objections that consequentialists have mounted against the deontologists’/retributivists’ defense of proportionality fall by the wayside, but a new threat to the proportionality requirement replaces it: the ease with which any such requirement can be circumvented
US law is often cast as a notable outlier in two prominent fields of comparative studies. Among comp...
This Article examines the Supreme Court\u27s treatment of the Eighth Amendment with respect to claim...
Conceptual debates about proportionality and its moral and political force need to be placed in hist...
This essay explores the case against strict liability offenses as part of the more general debate ab...
The paper addresses a puzzle about the proportionality requirement on self-defense due to L. Alexand...
Philosophers of criminal punishment widely agree that criminal punishment should be “proportional” t...
This Essay makes the case for proportional mens rea, a proportionality-based approach to mens rea ...
John Deigh\u27s new volume of previously published essays covers expansive ground—from moral psychol...
I come to grips with the deontological critique of constitutional proportionality that asserts that ...
This Article examines proportionality as a constitutional limitation on the power to punish. In the ...
Setting the role of proportionality for punishing process of collective entities according to the ac...
This Article addresses the timely and controversial topic of constitutional limits on punitive damag...
AbstractMany philosophers have raised difficulties for any attempt to proportion punishment severity...
The concept of proportionality has been central to the retributive revival in penal theory, and is t...
What is the proportionate punishment for conduct that is neither harmful nor wrongful? A likely resp...
US law is often cast as a notable outlier in two prominent fields of comparative studies. Among comp...
This Article examines the Supreme Court\u27s treatment of the Eighth Amendment with respect to claim...
Conceptual debates about proportionality and its moral and political force need to be placed in hist...
This essay explores the case against strict liability offenses as part of the more general debate ab...
The paper addresses a puzzle about the proportionality requirement on self-defense due to L. Alexand...
Philosophers of criminal punishment widely agree that criminal punishment should be “proportional” t...
This Essay makes the case for proportional mens rea, a proportionality-based approach to mens rea ...
John Deigh\u27s new volume of previously published essays covers expansive ground—from moral psychol...
I come to grips with the deontological critique of constitutional proportionality that asserts that ...
This Article examines proportionality as a constitutional limitation on the power to punish. In the ...
Setting the role of proportionality for punishing process of collective entities according to the ac...
This Article addresses the timely and controversial topic of constitutional limits on punitive damag...
AbstractMany philosophers have raised difficulties for any attempt to proportion punishment severity...
The concept of proportionality has been central to the retributive revival in penal theory, and is t...
What is the proportionate punishment for conduct that is neither harmful nor wrongful? A likely resp...
US law is often cast as a notable outlier in two prominent fields of comparative studies. Among comp...
This Article examines the Supreme Court\u27s treatment of the Eighth Amendment with respect to claim...
Conceptual debates about proportionality and its moral and political force need to be placed in hist...