Book review: Social meaning, retributivism, and homicide [Book Review]

Law and Philosophy 19 (3):407 - 429 (2000)
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Abstract

This review addresses how the criminal law of homicide would be reformulated if it expressed only nonconsequentialist principles. Special attention is given to aggravated and mitigated categories of murder, to difficulties with the author’s “social meaning” approach predicated on responsible choice, to whether aggravating factors for murder should be limited to heinous motives, and to the distinction between justification and excuse in the law of provocation.

Author's Profile

Kenneth Simons
University of California, Irvine

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