In this essay I develop and defend a theory of state punishment within a wider conception of political legitimacy. While many moral theories of punishment focus on what is deserved by criminals, I theorize punishment within the specific context of the state’s relationship to its citizens. Central to my account is Rawls’s “liberal principle of legitimacy,” which requires that all state coercion be justifiable to all citizens. I extend this idea to the justification of political coercion to criminals qua citizens. I argue that the liberal principle of legitimacy implicitly requires states to respect the basic political rights of those who are guilty of committing crimes, thus prohibiting capital punishment
Criminal law theory traditionally has concerned itself almost exclusively with substantive criminal ...
When the state punishes a person, it treats him as it ordinarily should not. It takes away his prope...
This article argues that the justification of punishment is best conceived as a problem of political...
In this essay I develop and defend a theory of state punishment within a wider conception of politic...
In this article, Markus Dubber considers two questions. First, as a matter of political theory, how ...
This thesis argues that it is all-things-considered permissible for the state to punish citizens who...
This thesis addresses the philosophical justification of punishment in authoritarian states. It ques...
In this article, currently its penultimate version and to be published as part of a symposium on pol...
In ‘Why Criminal Law: A Question of Content?’, Douglas Husak argues that an analysis of the justifia...
Constitutional orders punish — and they punish abundantly. However, analysis of the constitutionalit...
This will be a presentation of my senior thesis in philosophy. It is a moral argument against retrib...
The aim of this paper is to outline a political theory of criminal law, that is, a theory that does ...
There is much with which to agree, and to admire, in Bennett’s fine book [Bennett (2008)]:1 in this ...
Some theorists argue that a justification of criminal punishment presupposes a theory of state power...
This article addresses the theoretical difficulty of justifying the use of penal coercion in circums...
Criminal law theory traditionally has concerned itself almost exclusively with substantive criminal ...
When the state punishes a person, it treats him as it ordinarily should not. It takes away his prope...
This article argues that the justification of punishment is best conceived as a problem of political...
In this essay I develop and defend a theory of state punishment within a wider conception of politic...
In this article, Markus Dubber considers two questions. First, as a matter of political theory, how ...
This thesis argues that it is all-things-considered permissible for the state to punish citizens who...
This thesis addresses the philosophical justification of punishment in authoritarian states. It ques...
In this article, currently its penultimate version and to be published as part of a symposium on pol...
In ‘Why Criminal Law: A Question of Content?’, Douglas Husak argues that an analysis of the justifia...
Constitutional orders punish — and they punish abundantly. However, analysis of the constitutionalit...
This will be a presentation of my senior thesis in philosophy. It is a moral argument against retrib...
The aim of this paper is to outline a political theory of criminal law, that is, a theory that does ...
There is much with which to agree, and to admire, in Bennett’s fine book [Bennett (2008)]:1 in this ...
Some theorists argue that a justification of criminal punishment presupposes a theory of state power...
This article addresses the theoretical difficulty of justifying the use of penal coercion in circums...
Criminal law theory traditionally has concerned itself almost exclusively with substantive criminal ...
When the state punishes a person, it treats him as it ordinarily should not. It takes away his prope...
This article argues that the justification of punishment is best conceived as a problem of political...