The United States Supreme Court has repeatedly insisted that what distinguishes a criminal punishment from a civil penalty is the presence of a punitive legislative intent. Legislative intent has this role, in part, because court and commentators alike conceive of the criminal law as the body of law that administers punishment; and punishment, in turn, is conceived of in intention-sensitive terms. I argue that this understanding of the distinction between civil penalties and criminal punishments depends on a highly controversial proposition in moral theory — namely, that an agent’s intentions bear directly on what it is permissible for that agent to do, a view most closely associated with the doctrine of double effect. Therefore, legal theo...
Current criminological interest in the boundaries of penality has done much to shed light on the def...
While the United States Supreme Court has developed an elaborate constitutional jurisprudence of cri...
The author refers to the ethics of responsibility and the communicative approach to law and on that...
Forget dogs: do people distinguish between being stumbled over and being kicked? Assessments of inte...
Substantive criminal law defines the conduct that the state punishes. Or does it? If the answer is y...
Around the concept criminal intent, as used in the criminallaw, some of the most intensive battles...
The law has long recognized a presumption against criminal strict liability. This Note situates that...
Criminal law scholarship is marked by a sharp fault line separating substantive criminal law from cr...
In criminal law circles, the accepted wisdom is that there are two and only two true justifications ...
So far as there is a school of criminal theory in the United States, it is a school devoted to sifti...
We maintain that conventional punishment theories obscure what is virtually always at the heart of p...
This article identifies two mistakes commonly made about the concept of punishment. First, confusion...
Although punishment has been a crucial feature of every legal system, widespread disagreement exists...
The concept of harm and the nature of its proper role in the criminal law has challenged legislators...
Recent trends in crime control have given new energy to an age-old question, namely what kinds of ac...
Current criminological interest in the boundaries of penality has done much to shed light on the def...
While the United States Supreme Court has developed an elaborate constitutional jurisprudence of cri...
The author refers to the ethics of responsibility and the communicative approach to law and on that...
Forget dogs: do people distinguish between being stumbled over and being kicked? Assessments of inte...
Substantive criminal law defines the conduct that the state punishes. Or does it? If the answer is y...
Around the concept criminal intent, as used in the criminallaw, some of the most intensive battles...
The law has long recognized a presumption against criminal strict liability. This Note situates that...
Criminal law scholarship is marked by a sharp fault line separating substantive criminal law from cr...
In criminal law circles, the accepted wisdom is that there are two and only two true justifications ...
So far as there is a school of criminal theory in the United States, it is a school devoted to sifti...
We maintain that conventional punishment theories obscure what is virtually always at the heart of p...
This article identifies two mistakes commonly made about the concept of punishment. First, confusion...
Although punishment has been a crucial feature of every legal system, widespread disagreement exists...
The concept of harm and the nature of its proper role in the criminal law has challenged legislators...
Recent trends in crime control have given new energy to an age-old question, namely what kinds of ac...
Current criminological interest in the boundaries of penality has done much to shed light on the def...
While the United States Supreme Court has developed an elaborate constitutional jurisprudence of cri...
The author refers to the ethics of responsibility and the communicative approach to law and on that...