Crime and culpability : a theory of criminal law / by Larry Alexander and Kimberly Kessler Ferzan with contributions by Stephen J. Morse. electronic resource
Material type:
- 9780521518772 (hbk.)
- 0521518776 (hbk.)
- 9780521739610 (pbk.)
- 0521739616 (pbk.)
- 345/.001 22
- K5103 .A44 2009
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KNCHR Library SharePoint | Non-Fiction | K5103 .A44 2009 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Link to resource | Available |
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K4700 .E46 2008 Emergencies and the limits of legality | K5000 .B63 2007eb The Milošević trial | K5083 .L38 2008 Truth, error, and criminal law : | K5103 .A44 2009 Crime and culpability : | K5165 .G35 2009 The principle of legality in international and comparative criminal law | K5301 .L34 2008 War crimes in internal armed conflicts | KBP526.3 .T83 2008 Women, family, and gender in Islamic law / |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 331-348) and index.
Criminal law, punishment, and desert -- The essence of culpability : acts manifesting insufficient concern for the legally protected interests of others -- Negligence -- Defeaters of culpability -- Only culpability, not reulting harm, affects desert -- When are inchoate crimes culpable and why? -- The locus of culpability -- What a culpability-based criminal code might look like.
This book presents a comprehensive overview of what the criminal law would look like if organized around the principle that those who deserve punishment should receive punishment commensurate with, but no greater than, that which they deserve. Larry Alexander and Kimberly Kessler Ferzan argue that desert is a function of the actor's culpability, and that culpability is a function of the risks of harm to protected interests that the actor believes he is imposing and his reasons for acting in the face of those risks. The authors deny that resultant harms, as well as unperceived risks, affect the actor's desert. They thus reject punishment for inadvertent negligence as well as for intentions or preparatory acts that are not risky. Alexander and Ferzan discuss the reasons for imposing risks that negate or mitigate culpability, the individuation of crimes, and omissions. They conclude with a discussion of rules versus standards in criminal law and offer a description of the shape of criminal law in the event that the authors' conceptualization is put into practice.
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