In a series of recent writings, Paul Robinson has defended “empirical desert” as the way of deriving distributive principles for determining who should be punished and by how much. Desert is, of course, an idea with a long history, and its precise role in criminal law has been much debated. In addressing various criticisms of desert in criminal law, Robinson distinguishes empirical desert from what he calls “deontological desert” and “vengeful desert.” Robinson’s strategy, which I call “divide and deflect,” fights off various objections traditionally leveled against the use of desert in criminal law by arguing that most of those objections may be valid for “deontological” and “vengeful” desert but are not applicable to “empirical desert.” S...
I endorse an old view that distributive justice can best be understood as people getting what they d...
According to empirical desert theory, good utilitarian grounds exist for distributing criminal punis...
Can desert be the foundation of justice? Recent attempts to redefine distributive justice in the lig...
In a series of recent writings, Paul Robinson has defended “empirical desert” as the way of deriving...
The dispute over the role desert should play, if any, in assessing criminal liability and punishment...
Paul Robinson has written a series of articles advocating the view that empirical desert should gove...
Robinson supports the proposed purposes text of the New American Law Institute Report on Sentencin...
The article takes up the debate between utility and desert as distributive principles for criminal l...
article published in law reviewThis essay is a response to an article by Paul Robinson, Joshua Barto...
Robinson supports the proposed "purposes" text of the New American Law Institute Report on Sentencin...
Desert appears to be in ascendence as a distributive principle for criminal liability and punishment...
The two main goals of this dissertation are to provide a clear and practical conception of desert th...
It has long been assumed that the goals of doing justice and fighting crime necessarily conflict. Re...
A number of articles and empirical studies over the past decade, most by Paul Robinson and co-author...
The task of this Article is to evaluate these two approaches to understanding the role of retributio...
I endorse an old view that distributive justice can best be understood as people getting what they d...
According to empirical desert theory, good utilitarian grounds exist for distributing criminal punis...
Can desert be the foundation of justice? Recent attempts to redefine distributive justice in the lig...
In a series of recent writings, Paul Robinson has defended “empirical desert” as the way of deriving...
The dispute over the role desert should play, if any, in assessing criminal liability and punishment...
Paul Robinson has written a series of articles advocating the view that empirical desert should gove...
Robinson supports the proposed purposes text of the New American Law Institute Report on Sentencin...
The article takes up the debate between utility and desert as distributive principles for criminal l...
article published in law reviewThis essay is a response to an article by Paul Robinson, Joshua Barto...
Robinson supports the proposed "purposes" text of the New American Law Institute Report on Sentencin...
Desert appears to be in ascendence as a distributive principle for criminal liability and punishment...
The two main goals of this dissertation are to provide a clear and practical conception of desert th...
It has long been assumed that the goals of doing justice and fighting crime necessarily conflict. Re...
A number of articles and empirical studies over the past decade, most by Paul Robinson and co-author...
The task of this Article is to evaluate these two approaches to understanding the role of retributio...
I endorse an old view that distributive justice can best be understood as people getting what they d...
According to empirical desert theory, good utilitarian grounds exist for distributing criminal punis...
Can desert be the foundation of justice? Recent attempts to redefine distributive justice in the lig...