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  1. Answers.Victor Tadros - 2015 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 9 (1):73-102.
    I am extremely grateful to Daniel Farrell, Hamish Stewart, Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen and Suzanne Uniacke for their careful, imaginative and probing responses to The Ends of Harm: The Moral Foundations of Criminal Law in this special issue of Criminal Law and Philosophy. It is especially gratifying that philosophers of this calibre, not all of whom have worked directly on the philosophy of punishment and the philosophy of criminal law, have engaged with Ends in this way.One of my ambitions in writing Ends (...)
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  • Desert and Fairness in Criminal Justice.Erin I. Kelly - 2012 - Philosophical Topics 40 (1):63-77.
    Moral condemnation has become the public narrative of our criminal justice practices, but the distribution of criminal sanctions is not and should not be guided by judgments of what individual wrongdoers morally deserve. Criteria for evaluating a person’s liability to criminal sanctions are general standards that are influenced by how we understand the relative social urgency and priority of reducing crimes of various types. These standards thus depend on considerations that are not a matter of individual moral desert. Furthermore, the (...)
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  • Criminal Justice without Retribution.Erin I. Kelly - 2009 - Journal of Philosophy 106 (8):440-462.
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  • The common structure of virtue and desert.Thomas Hurka - 2001 - Ethics 112 (1):6-31.
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  • The Expressive Function of Punishment.Joel Feinberg - 1965 - The Monist 49 (3):397-423.
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  • Punishment without the state.Daniel M. Farrell - 1988 - Noûs 22 (3):437-453.
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  • Deterrence and the Just Distribution of Harm*: DANIEL M. FARRELL.Daniel M. Farrell - 1995 - Social Philosophy and Policy 12 (2):220-240.
    It is extraordinary, when one thinks about it, how little attention has been paid by theorists of the nature and justification of punishment to the idea that punishment is essentially a matter of self-defense. H. L. A. Hart, for example, in his famous “Prolegomenon to the Principles of Punishment,” is clearly committed to the view that, at bottom, there are just three directions in which a plausible theory of punishment can go: we can try to justify punishment on purely consequentialist (...)
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  • They Deserve to Suffer.Lawrence H. Davis - 1972 - Analysis 32 (4):136 - 140.
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  • Rehabilitating Retributivism.Mitchell N. Berman - 2013 - Law and Philosophy 32 (1):83-108.
    This review essay of Victor Tadros’s new book, “The Ends of Harm: The Moral Foundations of Criminal Law,” responds to Tadros’s energetic and sophisticated attacks on retributivist justifications for criminal punishment. I argue, in a nutshell, that those attacks fail. In defending retributivism, however, I also sketch original views on two questions that retributivism must address but that many or most retributivists have skated past. First, what do wrongdoers deserve – to suffer? to be punished? something else? Second, what does (...)
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  • Punishment and justification.Mitchell N. Berman - 2008 - Ethics 118 (2):258-290.
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  • Self-defense, punishment, and proportionality.Larry Alexander - 1991 - Law and Philosophy 10 (3):323 - 328.
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  • They deserve to suffer.Lawrence H. Davis - 1972 - Analysis 32 (4):136.
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  • The retributive liability theory of punishment.Jerry Cederblom - 1995 - Public Affairs Quarterly 9 (4):305-315.
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  • The right to threaten and the right to punish.Warren Quinn - 1985 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 14 (4):327-373.
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