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Duff / Green

PHILOSOPHICAL FOUNDATIONS OF C

Medium: Buch
ISBN: 978-0-19-955915-2
Verlag: OXFORD UNIV PR
Erscheinungstermin: 10.03.2011
Lieferfrist: bis zu 10 Tage
25 leading contemporary theorists of criminal law tackle a range of foundational issues about the proper aims and structure of the criminal law in a liberal democracy.

The challenges facing criminal law are many. There are crises of over-criminalization and over-imprisonment; penal policy has become so politicized that it is difficult to find any clear consensus on what aims the criminal law can properly serve; governments seeking to protect their citizens in the face of a range of perceived threats have pushed the outer limits of criminal law and blurred its boundaries. To think clearly about the future of criminal law, and its role in a liberal society,
foundational questions about its proper scope, structure, and operations must be re-examined. What kinds of conduct should be criminalized? What are the principles of criminal responsibility? How should offences and defences be defined? The criminal process and the criminal trial need to be studied
closely, and the purposes and modes of punishment should be scrutinized.

Such a re-examination must draw on the resources of various disciplines-notably law, political and moral philosophy, criminology and history; it must examine both the inner logic of criminal law and its place in a larger legal and political structure; it must attend to the growing field of international criminal law, it must consider how the criminal law can respond to the challenges of a changing world.

Topics covered in this volume include the question of criminalization and the proper scope of the criminal law; the grounds of criminal responsibility; the ways in which offences and defences should be defined; the criminal process and its values; criminal punishment; the relationship between international criminal law and domestic criminal law. Together, the essays provide a picture of the exciting state of criminal law theory today, and the basis for further research and debate in the coming
years.

Produkteigenschaften


  • Artikelnummer: 9780199559152
  • Medium: Buch
  • ISBN: 978-0-19-955915-2
  • Verlag: OXFORD UNIV PR
  • Erscheinungstermin: 10.03.2011
  • Sprache(n): Englisch
  • Auflage: 1. Auflage 2011
  • Serie: Philosophical Foundations of Law
  • Produktform: Gebunden
  • Gewicht: 1146 g
  • Seiten: 560
  • Format (B x H x T): 177 x 250 x 37 mm
  • Ausgabetyp: Kein, Unbekannt

Autoren/Hrsg.

Herausgeber

Duff, R.A.

R A Duff was educated at Oxford, and taught for forty years in the Philosophy Department at the University of Stirling. He now also holds a half-time position at the University of Minnesota Law School.

Green, Stuart

Stuart P Green was educated at Yale Law School and serves as a Professor of Law at Rutgers Law School-Newark.

1: R.A. Duff & Stuart Green: Introduction: Searching for Foundations
2: Malcolm Thorburn: Criminal Law as Public Law
3: Andrew Ashworth and Lucia Zedner: Just Prevention: Preventive Rationales and the Limits of the Criminal Law
4: Markus Dubber: Foundations of State Punishment in Modern Liberal Democracies: Toward a Genealogy of American Criminal Law
5: Richard Dagger: Republicanism and the Foundations of Criminal Law
6: Matt Matravers: Political Theory and the Criminal Law
7: Alice Ristroph: Responsibility for the Criminal Law
8: R.A. Duff: To Whom Must We Answer? Responsibility and the Criminal Law
9: Nicola Lacey: The Resurgence of Character: Responsibility in the Context of Criminalization
10: Douglas Husak: The 'De Minimis' Defence to Criminal Liability
11: Larry Alexander and Kim Ferzan: Beyond the Special Part
12: Michael Moore: Intention as a Marker of Moral Culpability and Legal Punishability
13: Ken Simons: Understanding the topography of moral and criminal law norms
14: Victor Tadros: Wrongdoing and Motivation
15: Peter Westen: The Ontological Problem Of 'Risk' and 'Endangerment' in Criminal Law
16: Donald Dripps: The Substance-Procedure Relationship in Criminal Law
17: John Gardner and Francois Tanguay-Renaud: What Self-Defence and Punishment Share
18: Mireille Hildebrandt: Criminal Liability and 'Smart' Environments
19: Paul Roberts: Groundwork for a Jurisprudence of Criminal Procedure
20: Stuart Green: Just Desserts in Unjust Societies: A Case-specific Approach
21: Mitchell Berman: Two Kinds of Retributivism
22: Adil Haque: Criminal Law Theory Goes to War
23: Christopher Wellman: Piercing Sovereignty: A Rationale for International Jurisdiction Over Crimes that Do Not Cross International Borders