Law, Morality and the Criminalization of Negligence

Dissertation, University of Illinois at Chicago (1985)
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Abstract

There are two sorts of general categorical arguments against criminalizing negligence available on the basis of standard Anglo-American theories of the criminal law. One general line is founded on an assumed relation of subordination of the criminal law to morality. This is termed the external argument. In Chapters Two and Three it is argued that external arguments fail because no appropriate subordination thesis can be established for the relation between law and morality. The other source for a categorical argument against criminalizing negligence is found in the interpretation of mens rea. Such arguments require a strong subjectivist interpretation of mens rea. It is shown that an interpretation sufficiently strong to support a categorical argument is inferior to alternative objectivist interpretations of mens rea. A nonmoral normative theory for law is developed in Chapter Five and applied to the problem of negligence. This theory provides for at least some cases of criminalizing negligent conduct.

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