Research suggests that people of all demographics have nuanced and sophisticated notions of justice. In this intriguing new book, Paul H. Robinson demonstrates that judicial decisions that deviate from public conceptions of justice and desert can seriously undermine the American criminal justice system's integrity and legitimacy by failing to recognize or meet the needs of the communities it serves. Intuitions of Justice and the Utility of Desert sketches the contours of a wide range of lay conceptions of justice, touching many if not most of the issues that penal code drafters or policy makers must face, including normative crime control, universal understandings of justice, culpability, principles of adjudication, grading sentencing, justification defenses, and judicial discretion. Robinson warns that compromising the American criminal justice system to satisfy other interests can uncover hidden the costs incurred when a community's notions about justice are not reflected in its criminal laws. By ignoring the intuitions of justice held by the communities they serve, legislators, policymakers, and judges undermine the relevance of the criminal justice system and reduce its strength and legitimacy, creating a gap between what justice a community needs and what justice a court or law prescribes.
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Research suggests that people of all demographics have nuanced and sophisticated notions of justice. Intuitions of Justice and the Utility of Desert sketches the contours of a wide range of lay judgments of justice, touching many if not most of the issues that penal code drafters or policy makers must face.
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Preface and Acknowledgments ; Selected Robinson Bibliography ; Part I. The Nature of Judgments About Justice ; Chapter 1. Judgments About Justice as Intuitional and Nuanced ; Chapter 2. Judgments About Justice as a Human Universal: Agreements on a Core of Wrongdoing ; Chapter 3. The Origins of Shared Intuitions of Justice ; Chapter 4. Disagreements About Justice ; Chapter 5. Changing People's Judgments of Justice ; Part II. Should the Criminal Law Care What the Lay Person Thinks Is Just? ; Chapter 6. Current Law's Deference to Lay Judgments of Justice ; Chapter 7. Current Law's Conflicts with Lay Judgments of Justice ; Chapter 8. Normative Crime Control: The Utility of Desert ; Chapter 9. Building Moral Credibility and the Disutility of Injustice ; Chapter 10. Deviations from Empirical Desert ; Chapter 11. Implications for Criminal Justice and Other Reform ; Part III. The Content of Lay Judgments of Justice ; Chapter 12. Rules of Conduct: Doctrines of Criminalization ; Chapter 13. Rules of Conduct: Doctrines of Justification ; Chapter 14. Principles of Adjudication: Doctrines of Culpability ; Chapter 15. Principles of Adjudication: Doctrines of Excuse ; Chapter 16. Principles of Adjudication: Doctrines of Grading ; Chapter 17. Law-Community Agreement and Conflict, and Its Implications ; Part IV. Empirical Studies of Lay Judgments of Justice as a Law and Policy Tool ; Chapter 18. Explaining History: Shifting Views of Criminality ; Chapter 19. Testing Competing Theories: Blackmail ; Chapter 20. Testing Competing Theories: Justification Defenses ; Chapter 21. Guiding Judicial Discretion: Extralegal Punishment Factors ; Chapter 22. Intuitions of Justice & the Utility of Desert
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"This remarkable book is the fruit of a two-decades-old project pioneered by Paul Robinson and his collaborators into the moral intuitions behind our criminal law. It reveals that our intuitions about who and what deserves to be punished, and how much, are remarkably precise and universally shared. He offers intriguing speculations as to why that might be so and shows that legislators who try to make up laws that go against those intuitions-as they habitually do in the name of populist or pragmatic considerations-wreak great havoc with our system." --Leo Katz, Frank Carano Professor of Law, University of Pennsylvania Law School "A defining work on the ideal distributive principles for punishment. It is undoubtedly one of the best books I have recently read. Its highly rational approach, with radical new thinking, is important for both legislators and criminal law researchers. This book will provide important insights to the changing landscape of modern criminal theory." --Zhao Bingzhi, President and Professor, Chinese Criminal Law Society "No criminal law theorist has done more than Paul Robinson to employ sophisticated techniques of social science to discover what laypersons think about the fairness of various rules and doctrines in the substantive criminal law. In extraordinarily readable prose, Robinson argues that efforts to ensure that our penal law conforms to the judgments of laypersons will help to produce a criminal law that is beneficial to us all." --Doug Husak, Professor II, Department of Philosophy, Rutgers University "The book draws upon several empirical studies, undertaken by Robinson and collaborators, into aspects of lay understanding, law intuitions and lay opinions. The result is a volume that raises challenging questions about the role of the public in criminal law doctrine and in sentencing principles, written with Robinson's characteristic clarity and persuasiveness." --Andrew Ashworth, Vinerian Professor of English Law, University of Oxford
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"This remarkable book is the fruit of a two-decades-old project pioneered by Paul Robinson and his collaborators into the moral intuitions behind our criminal law. It reveals that our intuitions about who and what deserves to be punished, and how much, are remarkably precise and universally shared. He offers intriguing speculations as to why that might be so and shows that legislators who try to make up laws that go against those intuitions-as they habitually do in the name of populist or pragmatic considerations-wreak great havoc with our system." --Leo Katz, Frank Carano Professor of Law, University of Pennsylvania Law School "A defining work on the ideal distributive principles for punishment. It is undoubtedly one of the best books I have recently read. Its highly rational approach, with radical new thinking, is important for both legislators and criminal law researchers. This book will provide important insights to the changing landscape of modern criminal theory." --Zhao Bingzhi, President and Professor, Chinese Criminal Law Society "No criminal law theorist has done more than Paul Robinson to employ sophisticated techniques of social science to discover what laypersons think about the fairness of various rules and doctrines in the substantive criminal law. In extraordinarily readable prose, Robinson argues that efforts to ensure that our penal law conforms to the judgments of laypersons will help to produce a criminal law that is beneficial to us all." --Doug Husak, Professor II, Department of Philosophy, Rutgers University "The book draws upon several empirical studies, undertaken by Robinson and collaborators, into aspects of lay understanding, law intuitions and lay opinions. The result is a volume that raises challenging questions about the role of the public in criminal law doctrine and in sentencing principles, written with Robinson's characteristic clarity and persuasiveness." --Andrew Ashworth, Vinerian Professor of English Law, University of Oxford
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Selling point: Explores why ignoring public opinions about justice can compromise the legitimacy and credibility of the American criminal justice system Selling point: Explains empirical research that explores how the public's ideas about just desert and proper punishment differs from the criminal courts' approach Selling point: Looks at how society's views about criminality have changed over time Selling point: Demonstrates how to use empirical research on lay concepts of justice to change and guide policy and lawmaking
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Paul H. Robinson is the Colin S. Diver Professor of Law at the University of Pennsylvania, and is a leading expert on criminal law. Professor Robinson holds law degrees from U.C.L.A., Harvard, and Cambridge. He has served as a federal prosecutor, as counsel for the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Criminal Law, and as one of the original commissioners of the U.S. Sentencing Commission. He is an editor of Criminal Law Conversations (Oxford 2009), and author of Distributive Principles of Criminal Law: Who Should Be Punished How Much? (Oxford 2008) and Law Without Justice: Why Criminal Law Doesn't Give People What They Deserve (Oxford 2005).
Les mer
Selling point: Explores why ignoring public opinions about justice can compromise the legitimacy and credibility of the American criminal justice system Selling point: Explains empirical research that explores how the public's ideas about just desert and proper punishment differs from the criminal courts' approach Selling point: Looks at how society's views about criminality have changed over time Selling point: Demonstrates how to use empirical research on lay concepts of justice to change and guide policy and lawmaking
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780199917723
Publisert
2013
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
954 gr
Høyde
241 mm
Bredde
162 mm
Dybde
35 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
584

Forfatter

Biographical note

Paul H. Robinson is the Colin S. Diver Professor of Law at the University of Pennsylvania, and is a leading expert on criminal law. Professor Robinson holds law degrees from U.C.L.A., Harvard, and Cambridge. He has served as a federal prosecutor, as counsel for the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Criminal Law, and as one of the original commissioners of the U.S. Sentencing Commission. He is an editor of Criminal Law Conversations (Oxford 2009), and author of Distributive Principles of Criminal Law: Who Should Be Punished How Much? (Oxford 2008) and Law Without Justice: Why Criminal Law Doesn't Give People What They Deserve (Oxford 2005).