Criminal Law and Philosophy

‘O Call Me Not to Justify the Wrong’: Criminal Answerability and the Offence/Defence Distinction
Crime, Freedom and Civic Bonds: Arthur Ripstein’s Force and Freedom: Kant’s Legal and Political Philosophy
Duff on the Legitimacy of Punishment of Socially Deprived Offenders
Holding Organized Crime Leaders Accountable for the Crimes of their Subordinates
Human Dignity of “Offenders”: A Limitation on Substantive Criminal Law
Iconoclasts? Who, Us? A Reply to Dolinko
Law and Social Protests
Participatory Democracy and Criminal Justice
Paul D. Halliday: Habeas Corpus. From England to Empire
Precautionary Criminalisation in an Age of Vulnerable Autonomy
Property Offences as Crimes of Injustice
The Fault Element in the History of German Criminal Theory: With Some General Conclusions for the Rules of Imputation in a Legal System