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September 10, 2012
Segev on Consequentialism, Responsibility and Retribution
Re'em Segev (Hebrew University of Jerusalem – Faculty of Law) has posted Consequentialism, Responsibility and Retribution: Comments on Victor Tadros’ Theory of Punishment (Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies, Forthcoming) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
This paper considers some of the arguments in Victor Tadros’ book on the moral justification of criminal punishment. While the final end of the book is a theory of punishment, it discusses along the way also general topics in moral and political philosophy and considers the analogy between punishment and defensive force. Therefore, the book is of interest not only to people who are interested in the justification of punishment, but also to those who are interested in ethical theory more generally. In what follows, I first describe, very briefly, the main arguments in the book and then consider a few aspects of some of these arguments.
September 10, 2012 | Permalink
