Incarceration remains the foremost form of sentence for serious crimes in Western democracies. At the same time, the management of prisons and of the prison population has become a major real-world challenge, with growing concerns about overcrowding, the offenders’ well-being, and the failure of achieving the distal desideratum of reduced criminality, all of which have a moral dimension. In no small part motivated by these practical problems, the focus of the present article is on the ethical framework that we use in thinking about and administering criminal justice. I start with an analysis of imprisonment and its permissibility as a punitive tool of justice. In particular, I present a novel argument against punitive imprisonment, showing ...
In ‘Why Criminal Law: A Question of Content?’, Douglas Husak argues that an analysis of the justifia...
Most punishment theories acknowledge neither the full extent of the harms which punishment risks, no...
The 2008 financial crash, and the lessons it teaches us about the costs of unregulated excess, offer...
Incarceration remains the foremost form of sentence for serious crimes in Western democracies. At th...
The question of crime and punishment has been a subject of great controversy among moral philosopher...
Abstract: Prisoners’ rights advocates justifiably seek to combat the seemingly ever growing institut...
In this article, I argue that the kind of suffering that prisons impose upon people who are incarcer...
The one thing that most scholars of criminal law agree upon is that we are in desperate need of a co...
Philosophers' attempts to justify punishment have focused on a wide range of features that paradigma...
The concept of harm and the nature of its proper role in the criminal law has challenged legislators...
This thesis provides an ethical analysis of imprisonment as a mode of punishment. Consisting in an i...
Punishing the innocent is incontestably repugnant. Punishing offenders more harshly than is justifie...
The author refers to the ethics of responsibility and the communicative approach to law and on that...
Most philosophers believe that wrongdoers sometimes deserve to be punished by long prison sentences....
Government’s use of imprisonment raises distinctive moral issues. Even if government has broad autho...
In ‘Why Criminal Law: A Question of Content?’, Douglas Husak argues that an analysis of the justifia...
Most punishment theories acknowledge neither the full extent of the harms which punishment risks, no...
The 2008 financial crash, and the lessons it teaches us about the costs of unregulated excess, offer...
Incarceration remains the foremost form of sentence for serious crimes in Western democracies. At th...
The question of crime and punishment has been a subject of great controversy among moral philosopher...
Abstract: Prisoners’ rights advocates justifiably seek to combat the seemingly ever growing institut...
In this article, I argue that the kind of suffering that prisons impose upon people who are incarcer...
The one thing that most scholars of criminal law agree upon is that we are in desperate need of a co...
Philosophers' attempts to justify punishment have focused on a wide range of features that paradigma...
The concept of harm and the nature of its proper role in the criminal law has challenged legislators...
This thesis provides an ethical analysis of imprisonment as a mode of punishment. Consisting in an i...
Punishing the innocent is incontestably repugnant. Punishing offenders more harshly than is justifie...
The author refers to the ethics of responsibility and the communicative approach to law and on that...
Most philosophers believe that wrongdoers sometimes deserve to be punished by long prison sentences....
Government’s use of imprisonment raises distinctive moral issues. Even if government has broad autho...
In ‘Why Criminal Law: A Question of Content?’, Douglas Husak argues that an analysis of the justifia...
Most punishment theories acknowledge neither the full extent of the harms which punishment risks, no...
The 2008 financial crash, and the lessons it teaches us about the costs of unregulated excess, offer...