This Article addresses the timely and controversial topic of constitutional limits on punitive damages and brings a criminal punishment theory perspective to the analysis of this issue. The question of how to determine when punishment is unconstitutionally excessive has been and continues to be a subject of intense debate in the courts and scholarly circles. The United States Supreme Court has subjected criminal sanctions, criminal forfeitures, and punitive damages to a proportionality requirement, but the Court uses different approaches to the proportionality analysis depending on the type of punishment. In the criminal context, the Court has retreated in large part from proportionality review, deferring to legislative maxima for criminal ...
A contemporary theory of punitive damages must answer two questions: (1) what place, if any, do puni...
In 2003, the Supreme Court created a presumption that only single-digit ratios of punitive damages t...
Constitutional orders punish — and they punish abundantly. However, analysis of the constitutionalit...
This Article addresses the timely and controversial topic of constitutional limits on punitive damag...
Part I of this Article reviews the case law regarding judicial review of both terms of imprisonment ...
This Article examines proportionality as a constitutional limitation on the power to punish. In the ...
This Article examines the Supreme Court\u27s treatment of the Eighth Amendment with respect to claim...
There has been a remarkable increase during the last decade in the imposition of overlapping civil, ...
There has been a remarkable increase during the last decade in the imposition of overlapping civil, ...
When is a death sentence, a sentence of imprisonment, or a fine so excessive or disproportionate ...
Almost twenty years ago, the Supreme Court in BMW v. Gore invoked the Due Process Clause for the fir...
Over the last fifteen years, the Supreme Court has formulated new constitutional principles to const...
In this Article, Professors Chanenson and Gotanda propose that courts treat comparable maximum crimi...
This Note explores whether courts should look beyond the broad language in Ingraham v. Wright and sc...
The limitations on a punitive damage award depend on the conception of punitive damages. Is it a pri...
A contemporary theory of punitive damages must answer two questions: (1) what place, if any, do puni...
In 2003, the Supreme Court created a presumption that only single-digit ratios of punitive damages t...
Constitutional orders punish — and they punish abundantly. However, analysis of the constitutionalit...
This Article addresses the timely and controversial topic of constitutional limits on punitive damag...
Part I of this Article reviews the case law regarding judicial review of both terms of imprisonment ...
This Article examines proportionality as a constitutional limitation on the power to punish. In the ...
This Article examines the Supreme Court\u27s treatment of the Eighth Amendment with respect to claim...
There has been a remarkable increase during the last decade in the imposition of overlapping civil, ...
There has been a remarkable increase during the last decade in the imposition of overlapping civil, ...
When is a death sentence, a sentence of imprisonment, or a fine so excessive or disproportionate ...
Almost twenty years ago, the Supreme Court in BMW v. Gore invoked the Due Process Clause for the fir...
Over the last fifteen years, the Supreme Court has formulated new constitutional principles to const...
In this Article, Professors Chanenson and Gotanda propose that courts treat comparable maximum crimi...
This Note explores whether courts should look beyond the broad language in Ingraham v. Wright and sc...
The limitations on a punitive damage award depend on the conception of punitive damages. Is it a pri...
A contemporary theory of punitive damages must answer two questions: (1) what place, if any, do puni...
In 2003, the Supreme Court created a presumption that only single-digit ratios of punitive damages t...
Constitutional orders punish — and they punish abundantly. However, analysis of the constitutionalit...