Rejecting Retributivism
Rejecting Retributivism
Free Will, Punishment, and Criminal Justice
Caruso, Gregg D.
Cambridge University Press
09/2021
399
Mole
Inglês
9781108723480
15 a 20 dias
534
- 1. Free will, legal punishment, and retributivism
- 2. Free will skepticism: hard incompatibilism and hard luck
- 3. The epistemic argument against retributivism
- 4. Additional reasons for rejecting retributivism
- 5. Consequentialist, educational, and mixed theories of punishment
- 6. Public health-quarantine model I: a non-retributive approach to criminal behavior
- 7. Public health-quarantine model II: the social determinants of health & criminal behavior
- 8. Public health-quarantine model iii: human dignity, victims' rights, rehabilitation, and preemptive incapacitation
- 9. Public health-quarantine model IV: funishment, deterrence, evidentiary standards, and indefinite detention
- References
- Index.
- 1. Free will, legal punishment, and retributivism
- 2. Free will skepticism: hard incompatibilism and hard luck
- 3. The epistemic argument against retributivism
- 4. Additional reasons for rejecting retributivism
- 5. Consequentialist, educational, and mixed theories of punishment
- 6. Public health-quarantine model I: a non-retributive approach to criminal behavior
- 7. Public health-quarantine model II: the social determinants of health & criminal behavior
- 8. Public health-quarantine model iii: human dignity, victims' rights, rehabilitation, and preemptive incapacitation
- 9. Public health-quarantine model IV: funishment, deterrence, evidentiary standards, and indefinite detention
- References
- Index.