The paper criticizes criminal law scholarship for helping to construct and failing to expose analytic structures that falsely claim a higher level of rationality and coherence than current criminal law theory deserves. It offers illustrations of three such illusions of rationality. First, it is common in criminal law discourse for scholars and judges to cite any of the standard litany of the purposes of punishment -- just deserts, deterrence, incapacitation of the dangerous, rehabilitation, and sometimes other purposes -- as a justification for one or another liability rule or sentencing practice. The cited purpose gives the rules an aura of rationality, but one that is, in large part, illusory. Without a principle defining the interrel...
Modern criminal law scholars and policymakers assume they are free to construct criminal law rules b...
This article is based on the Louis Caplan Lecture delivered by Prof. Allen on April 10, 1981, at the...
THE criminal law codification movement of the 1960s and 70s was guided by instrumentalist principles...
The paper criticizes criminal law scholarship for helping to construct and failing to expose analyti...
The paper criticizes criminal law scholarship for helping to construct and failing to expose analyti...
The paper criticizes criminal law scholarship for helping to construct and failing to expose analyti...
Criminal law theorists like to think that they are moving existing criminal law theory to a higher p...
Criminal law, for much of the nineteenth century and part of the twentieth, was at the forefront of ...
This Article presents an evidentiary theory of substantive criminal law according to which sanctions...
This Article is written from a utilitarian point of view. In other words, the author assumes that th...
Our literature uniformly describes American criminal law as the product of a great clash between uti...
These are good times – at least for the theory of criminal law. This special issue of Buffalo Crimin...
This Article presents an evidentiary theory of substantive criminal law according to which sanctions...
This Article presents an evidentiary theory of substantive criminal law according to which sanctions...
Modern criminal law scholars and policymakers assume they are free to construct criminal law rules b...
Modern criminal law scholars and policymakers assume they are free to construct criminal law rules b...
This article is based on the Louis Caplan Lecture delivered by Prof. Allen on April 10, 1981, at the...
THE criminal law codification movement of the 1960s and 70s was guided by instrumentalist principles...
The paper criticizes criminal law scholarship for helping to construct and failing to expose analyti...
The paper criticizes criminal law scholarship for helping to construct and failing to expose analyti...
The paper criticizes criminal law scholarship for helping to construct and failing to expose analyti...
Criminal law theorists like to think that they are moving existing criminal law theory to a higher p...
Criminal law, for much of the nineteenth century and part of the twentieth, was at the forefront of ...
This Article presents an evidentiary theory of substantive criminal law according to which sanctions...
This Article is written from a utilitarian point of view. In other words, the author assumes that th...
Our literature uniformly describes American criminal law as the product of a great clash between uti...
These are good times – at least for the theory of criminal law. This special issue of Buffalo Crimin...
This Article presents an evidentiary theory of substantive criminal law according to which sanctions...
This Article presents an evidentiary theory of substantive criminal law according to which sanctions...
Modern criminal law scholars and policymakers assume they are free to construct criminal law rules b...
Modern criminal law scholars and policymakers assume they are free to construct criminal law rules b...
This article is based on the Louis Caplan Lecture delivered by Prof. Allen on April 10, 1981, at the...
THE criminal law codification movement of the 1960s and 70s was guided by instrumentalist principles...