Gardner on the Philosophy of Criminal Law

Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 29 (1):169-187 (2008)
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Abstract

Offences and Defences is an outstanding collection of eleven of John Gardner's previously published papers in the philosophy of criminal law. I briefly examine his views on five central issues: his claims about basic responsibility and whether it should be construed as relational; his positions on agent neutrality; his arguments about whether moral and criminal wrongs are typically strict; his thoughts about the structure of defences, and, finally, what his account of rape reveals about the content of the harm principle

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Douglas Husak
Rutgers - New Brunswick

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