- Review of José Medina, The Epistemology of Protest: Silencing, Epistemic Activism, and the Communicative Life of Resistance
- When am I Accountable for What Others do? The Causal Accounts and the Explanatory Challenge
- Penance, Punishment and Restorative Suffering
- Public Wrongs and Human Rights: An Orderly Approach?
- Mixed Messages: How Criminal Law Fails to Express Feminist Values
- The Lessons and Limits of Prison Abolition: Replies to Critics
- Is Prison Abolitionism Self-Defeating?
- The Tension between Abolition and Reform
- The Idea and the Practice of Prison Abolition
- The Criminalisation of Intrafamilial Violence: a Historical and Political Exploration
- Criminal Sentencing and Artificial Intelligence: What is the Input Problem?
- Putting Proportional Punishment into Perspective
- Review of David DeGrazia’s Dialogues on Gun Control
- The Republican and Retributivist Punishment of Police Misconduct
- The Side-Effects of Imprisonment: Harm to the Family
- Correction: Criminalisation as a Speech-Act: Saying Through Criminalising
- Mechanical Choices: A Compatibilist Libertarian Response
- Criminalisation as a Speech-Act: Saying Through Criminalising
- Crime, Character, and the Evolution of the Penal Message
- A Conceptual Framework for Voluntary Confessions and the Privilege Against Self-Incrimination
- Culpability and Moral Vice
- “Blameworthiness” and “Culpability” are not Synonymous: A Sympathetic Amendment to Simester
- Espionage and The Harming of Innocents
- Criminalizing Sex: Is Consent all that Matters?
- Review of Debating Targeted Killing: Counter-Terrorism or Extrajudicial Execution? By Tamar Meisels and Jeremy Waldron (Oxford University Press, 2020)
- Espionage, Ethics, and Law: From Philosophy to Practice
- Correction: Plea Bargaining with Wrong Reasons: Coercive Plea-Offers and Responding to the Wrong Kind of Reason
- Review of Anita Ho, Live Like Nobody is Watching: Relational Autonomy in the Age of Artificial Intelligence Health Monitoring
- Review of Ann Whittle’s Freedom & Responsibility in Context (Oxford University Press, 2021)
- Espionage, Secrecy, and Institutional Moral Reasoning
- Harmfulness and Wrongfulness in Sex-by-Deception
- Courage, Consistency, and Other Conundra
- Compatibilism and Control over the Past: A New Argument Against Compatibilism
- Not in My Neighborhood: The Ethics of Excluding Ex-offenders from Housing
- Review of Christopher Nathan, The Ethics of Undercover Policing (Routledge, 2022)
- How Omissions Aren’t Special
- Why Command Responsibility May (not) Be a Solution to Address Responsibility Gaps in LAWS
- Review of Michael Blake, Justice, Migration, and Mercy (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2020)
- Human Dignity and the Innocent Agent
- Review of Emanuela Ceva and Maria Paola Ferretti, Political Corruption: The Internal Enemy of Public Institutions (Oxford: Oxford University Press 2021)
- The Role of Desert in Tort Law
- Responses and Appreciations
- Examining the Ethics of Spying: A Practitioner’s View
- Idealizing Abolition
- Public Wrongs and Power Relations in Non-Democratic & Illiberal Polities
- Justification and Motivation
- Criminal Responsibility Reconsidered
- Excuses and Exemptions: Is it Really a Mistake to Understand the Category of Excuses to Include Infancy and Insanity?
- Review of The Criminal Law’s Person, edited by Claes Lernestedt and Matt Matravers. Oxford: Hart, 2022
- When is Disbelief Epistemic Injustice? Criminal Procedure, Recovered Memories, and Deformations of the Epistemic Subject
- Reporting Crimes and Arresting Criminals: Citizens’ Rights and Responsibilities Under Their Criminal Law
- How does Structural Injustice Impact Criminal Responsibility?
- Justifications and Rights-Displacements
- The Structure of Criminal Law
- The Voice of the Criminal Law
- Review of Ned Dobos: Ethics, Security, and the War-Machine: The True Cost of the Military (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020)
- Moore on Degrees of Responsibility
- Official Disobedience: Bureaucrats & Unjust Laws
- Criminal Law Theory: Introduction
- The Legal Artifice of Liberty: On Beccaria’s Philosophy
- The Role of Mens Rea in Mediating the Scope of Prohibitions
- Standing and Pre-trial Misconduct: Hypocrisy, ‘Separation’, Inconsistent Blame, and Frustration
- Awareness and the Recklessness/Negligence Distinction
- Reasonable Doubt, Robust Evidential Probability and the Unknown
- On What Underlies Excuse
- The Concept of the Police
- Causalism Without Causation
- Good Faith as a Normative Foundation of Policing
- Should Detection Avoidance Be Criminalized?
- Plea Bargaining with Wrong Reasons: Coercive Plea-Offers and Responding to the Wrong Kind of Reason
- Evidentiary Graded Punishment: A New Look at Criminal Liability for Failing to Report Criminal Activity
- Is Fair Opportunity a Comprehensive Theory of Responsibility?
- Craving and Control
- Gopal Sreenivasan, Emotion and Virtue: Five Questions About Courage
- What is Hate Speech? The Case for a Corpus Approach
- Flight and Force
- Too Objective for Culpability?
- On the Necessity Defense in a Democratic Welfare State: Leaving Pandora’s Box Ajar
- Deserving Blame, and Sometimes Punishment
- Review of The Scope of Consent by Tom Dougherty (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021)
- Review of Guy Elgat, Being Guilty: Freedom, Responsibility, and Conscience in German Philosophy from Kant to Heidegger (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2022)
- Introduction to Symposium on Policing and Political Philosophy
- Against the Evidence-Relative View of Liability to Defensive Harm
- The Right to Do Wrong: Morality and the Limits of Law, by Mark Osiel (Cambridge: Harvard University Press), 2019
- Moral Entanglement in Group Decision-Making: Explaining an Odd Rule in Corporate Criminal Liability
- Justifying Public Justice
- When Should the Master Answer? Respondeat Superior and the Criminal Law
- The Human Right to Adequate Social Inclusion: A Reply to Critics
- Review of The Movement for Black Lives: Philosophical Perspectives, Brandon Hogan, Michael Cholbi, Alex Madva, and Benjamin S. Yost, eds. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021
- Matthew C. Altman: A Theory of Legal Punishment: Deterrence, Retribution and the Aims of the State, Routledge, London, 2021
- Policing Disobedient Demonstrations
- A Fiduciary Principle of Policing
- Reclamation: A Liberal Theory of Criminal Justice
- Byproducts, Side-Effects, and the Law of War
- Standing to Punish the Disadvantaged
- Practical Wisdom, Situationism, and Virtue Conflicts: Exploring Gopal Sreenivasan’s Emotion and Virtue
- Prosecuting Crimes Against Humanity: Complementarity, Victims’ Rights and Domestic Courts
- Imprisonment
- Correction to: Michael Tonry, ed., One-Eyed and Toothless Miscreants (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020) ix + 249 pp
- A Reply to Our Critics
- Correction to: Review of Alec D. Walen The Mechanics of Claims and Permissible Killing in War (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019)
- The Justification of Punishment in Authoritarian States
- The Morality of Defensive Force: Replies to Otsuka, Frowe, Fabre, and Burri
- The Right to Associational Freedom and the Scope of Relationship-Dependent Duties
- Social Connections, Social Contributions, and Why They Matter: Comments on Being Sure of Each Other
- Review of Stephen P. Garvey, Guilty Acts, Guilty Minds (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020)
- Correction to: Inert
- Review of Why Free Will is Real, Christian List, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2019
- The Uses and Abuses of Sociality: A Reply To Kimberley Brownlee
- Review: Kamm, almost over: Aging, Dying, Death
- George Duke on Aristotle, Politics, and Nomos: Review of George Duke’s Aristotle and Law: The Politics of Nomos
- Review of Alec D. Walen The Mechanics of Claims and Permissible Killing in War (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019)
- Punishment With and Without the State: Comments on Linda Radzik’s The Ethics of Social Punishment: The Enforcement of Morality in Everyday Life
- Review of Duty to Self: Moral, Political, and Legal Self-Relation by Paul Schofield
- Dark Times, Black Light: A Reply to Yankah, Kelly, and Mills
- Do Criminal Offenders Have a Right to Neurorehabilitation?
- Policing the Gaps: Legitimacy, Special Obligations, and Omissions in Law Enforcement
- Why International Criminal Law Can and Should be Conceived With Supra-Positive Law: The Non-Positivistic Nature of International Criminal Legality
- Review of Gabrielle Watson, Respect and Criminal Justice, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2020
- Recklessness and Circumstances in Criminal Attempts
- What’s Really Wrong with Fining Crimes? On the Hard Treatment of Criminal Monetary Fines
- The Natural Meaning of Crime and Punishment: Denying and Affirming Freedom
- The Sociability Argument for the Burqa Ban: A Qualified Defence
- Criminal Law Exceptionalism as an Affirmative Ideology, and its Expansionist Discontents
- Blameworthiness and the Outcomes of One’s Actions
- Criminal Responsibility and Fair Moral Opportunity
- The Wages of Criminal Law Exceptionalism
- Could We Live Together Without Punishment? On the Exceptional Status of the Criminal Law
- Lowering the Boom: A Brief for Penal Leniency
- Is Criminal Law ‘Exceptional’?
- Punishment Theory, Mass Incarceration, and the Overdetermination of Racialized Justice
- The Remains of Exceptionalism in Criminal Law
- It is the Interaction, not a Specific Feature! A Pluralistic Theory of the Distinctiveness of Criminal Law
- On the ‘Specialness’ of the Criminal Law
- After the Gavel Falls: Rethinking the Relationship Between Sentencing and Prison Functions
- Criminal Law Exceptionalism: Introduction
- Dealing with Criminal Behavior: the Inaccuracy of the Quarantine Analogy
- Is Executive Function the Universal Acid?
- Michael Tonry, ed., One-Eyed and Toothless Miscreants (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020) ix + 249 pp
- Picking on the Weak and Vulnerable: A Review of Zachary Hoskins, Beyond Punishment? A Normative Account of the Collateral Legal Consequences of Conviction (2019)
- Review of A du Bois-Pedain and A Bottoms, eds., Penal Censure: Engagements Within and Beyond Desert Theory
- Review of Vincent Chiao, Criminal Law in the Age of the Administrative State
- Redoing Criminal Law: Taking the Deviant Turn
- Author’s Reply: Negligence and Normative Import
- Piero Moraro, Civil Disobedience: A Philosophical Overview
- The Objective(s) of Responsible Brains
- Defensive Liability: A Matter of Rights Enforcement, not Distributive Justice
- Minding Negligence
- Civil Disobedience in Times of Pandemic: Clarifying Rights and Duties
- Between Punishment and Care: Autonomous Offenders Who Commit Crimes Under the Influence of Mental Disorder
- Neuroscience and Normativity: How Knowledge of the Brain Offers a Deeper Understanding of Moral and Legal Responsibility
- Review of Alexander Brown and Adriana Sinclair, The Politics of Hate Speech Laws (New York: Routledge, 2019)
- Harming, Rescuing and the Necessity Constraint on Defensive Force
- Official Misrepresentations of the Law and Fairness
- We are More Than our Executive Functions: on the Emotional and Situational Aspects of Criminal Responsibility and Punishment
- Remorse, Dialogue, and Sentencing
- Risk Imposition and Liability to Defensive Harm
- Proportionality, Constraint, and Culpability
- Negligence and Culpability: Reflections on Alexander and Ferzan
- If One Can’t Lose Such a Right in These Circumstances, One Never Had It in the First Place
- A Review of Elinor Mason’s Ways to be Blameworthy
- Proportionality’s Lower Bound
- Offender Agency in a State-Centred Sentencing Process: In Search of an Agentic Sentencing Model
- Review of David Boonin, Beyond Roe: Why Abortion Should be Legal Even if the Fetus is a Person (Oxford University Press, 2019)
- Review of Free Speech in the Digital Age Eds. Susan J. Brison and Katharine Gelber
- The End of Liberty
- Retributivism and the (Lack of) Justification of Proportionality
- From Retributive to Restorative Justice
- Review of Alexander Sarch’s Criminally Ignorant
- Proxy Crimes and Overcriminalization
- Mala Prohibita and Proportionality
- Relating Neuroscience to Responsibility: Comments on Hirstein, Sifferd, and Fagan’s Responsible Brains
- Inert
- Do Offenders Deserve Proportionate Punishments?
- Punishment, Proportionality, and Aggregation
- Review Essay of In Defense of Gun Control by Hugh LaFollette
- The Ethical Implications of Proportioning Punishment to Deontological Desert
- The Expressivist Objection to Nonconsensual Neurocorrectives
- Criminal Law and Republican Liberty: Philip Pettit’s Account
- Proportionality’s Function
- Criminal Blame, Exclusion and Moral Dialogue
- Intervening Agency and Civilian Liability
- Manipulated Agents: Replies to Fischer, Haji, and McKenna
- Proportionality in Personal Life
- Initial Design, Manipulation, and Moral Responsibility
- Radical Reversal Cases and Normative Appraisals
- Larry Alexander and Kimberly Kessler Ferzan on Omissions and Normative Ignorance: A Critical Reply
- Conceptualizing Coercive Indoctrination in Moral and Legal Philosophy
- On Manipulated Agents and History-Sensitive Compatibilism
- Religion’s Liberalism
- Cross-Victim Defences
- The Merits and Limits of Conscience-Based Legal Exemptions
- Jason Hanna: In Our Best Interest: A Defense of Paternalism
- What is Criminal Rehabilitation?
- Punishment the Easy Way
- Evaluating Wrongness Constraints on Criminalisation
- Extending the Limits of Blame
- Defending the Realm of Criminal Law
- Reply to Quong, Patten, Miller and Waldron
- Collateral Legal Consequences of Criminal Convictions in a Society of Equals
- Manipulated Agents : Précis
- The Reach of the Realm
- The Problem of Over-Inclusive Offenses: A Closer Look at Duff on Legal Moralism and Mala Prohibita
- Can the Law Do Without Retributivism? Comments on Erin Kelly’s The Limits of Blame
- Review of Alex Sharpe’s Sexual Intimacy and Gender Identity ‘Fraud’: Reframing the Legal and Ethical Debate (Routledge 2019; ISBN: 978-0-367-28024-6)
- Review of Malcolm Bull, On Mercy
- Criminalization: In and Out
- Punishing Non-citizens
- Review of David Birks and Thomas Douglas, eds., Treatment for Crime: Philosophical Essays on Neurointerventions in Criminal Justice
- Sex, Reasons, Pro Tanto Wronging, and the Structure of Rape Liability
- John Gardner, in memoriam
- Clarifying Forfeiture Theory in Response to Dempsey and Lang
- Cecile Fabre, Economic Statecraft: Human Rights, Sanctions and Conditionality
- The Concept of Criminal Law
- Decision Theory, Relative Plausibility and the Criminal Standard of Proof
- Reasonable Self-doubt
- Psychological and Political Contributors to Criminal Culpability: Reply to Brink, Howard and Morse
- Against the Received Wisdom: Why the Criminal Justice System Should Give Kids a Break
- Review of John Lemos’ A Pragmatic Approach to Libertarian Free Will
- Crime and Punishment
- Religious Accommodation and Disproportionate Burden
- Are Dissenters Epistemically Arrogant?
- I Would Do Anything for Law (and That’s a Problem): Criminalization, Value, and Motives
- Special Issue on Recklessness and Negligence
- Approaching or Re-thinking the Realm of Criminal Law?
- Our “Barbarians” at the Gate: On the Undercriminalized Citizenship Deprivation as a Counterterrorism Tool
- The Moral Asymmetry of Juvenile and Adult Offenders
- Criminal Law and Penal Law: The Wrongness Constraint and a Complementary Forfeiture Model
- Duffing Up the Criminal Law?
- Legal Moralism, Overinclusive Offenses, and the Problem of Wrongfulness Conflation
- Review of Richard Dagger, Playing Fair: Political Obligation and the Problems of Punishment
- Dark Mores: Some Comments on Tommie Shelby’s Dark Ghettos: Injustice, Dissent, and Reform
- Recklessness Without the Risk
- Negligence, Mens Rea , and What We Want the Element of Mens Rea to Provide
- Taking Responsibility for Negligence and Non-negligence
- Yaffe on Democratic Citizenship and Juvenile Justice
- Epistemic Responsibility and Criminal Negligence
- Criminal Law at the Margins
- Two Models of Criminal Fault
- Whose Burden to Bear? Privilege, Lawbreaking and Race
- Reasons for Punishment: A Study in Philosophical Translation (Or, Why Sadistic Punishment is Morally Impermissible)
- The Reasonableness in Recklessness
- Review of Mark Dsouza’s Rationale – Based Defences in Criminal Law
- The Ethics of Law’s Authority: On Tommie Shelby’s, Dark Ghettos: Injustice, Dissent, and Reform
- Reckless Enabling
- Responses to Wrongs and Crimes
- Forfeiture and the Right to a Fair Trial
- What’s Wrong with Religious Establishment?
- On Laborde’s Liberalism
- Amnesty and Mercy
- Beyond Persecutory Impulse and Humanising Trace: On Didier Fassin’s The Will to Punish
- Adil Haque: Law and Morality at War (OUP, 2017)
- Response to Bennett and Sommers
- Review of Hannah Maslen: Remorse, Penal Theory and Sentencing
- Self-Defense, Deterrence, and the Use Objection: A Comment on Victor Tadros’s Wrongs and Crimes
- Can a Woman Rape a Man and Why Does It Matter?
- Strawson, Shoemaker, and the Hubris of Theories
- Animals Who Think and Love: Law, Identification and the Moral Psychology of Guilt
- Consent, Rights, and Reasons for Action
- Shoemaker on Sentiments and Quality of Will
- Review of Carolina Sartorio’s Causation and Free Will
- Review of Colleen Murphy, The Conceptual Foundations of Transitional Justice
- Review of Catherine Lu: Justice and Reconciliation in World Politics
- Review of Jens David Ohlin and Larry May, Necessity in International Law
- Biomarkers for the Rich and Dangerous: Why We Ought to Extend Bioprediction and Bioprevention to White-Collar Crime
- The Nature and Significance of Culpability
- Duties, Desert, and the Justification of Punishment
- The Practice of Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide Meets the Concept of Legalization
- On Wrongs and Crimes : Does Consent Require Only an Attempt to Communicate?
- Hypocrisy, Inconsistency, and the Moral Standing of the State
- Justifying and Excusing Sex
- Introduction to the Symposium on Crime Without Fault
- Who Can Blame Whom? Moral Standing to Blame and Punish Deprived Citizens
- Anger, Provocation and Loss of Self-Control: What Does ‘Losing It’ Really Mean?
- The Bête Noire and the Noble Lie: The International Criminal Court and (the Disavowal of) Politics
- Nulla Poena Sine Lege in Continental Criminal Law: Historical and Theoretical Analysis
- Review of Oona A. Hathaway and Scott J. Shapiro, The Internationalists: How a Radical Plan to Outlaw War Remade the World (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2017) 608 pp. $30.00
- Provocateurs and Their Rights to Self-Defence
- Can Corporations Experience Duress? An Examination of Emotion-Based Excuses and Group Agents
- Retributarianism: A New Individualization of Punishment
- Hitting Retributivism Where It Hurts
- The Citizen Victim: Reconciling the Public and Private in Criminal Sentencing
- Crime Victims and the Right to Punishment
- Hoskins’s New Benefit-Fairness Theory of Punishment
- The Duty to Disregard the Law
- The Wrong of Mass Punishment
- The Point of Mens Rea: The Case of Willful Ignorance
- Crimes, Public Wrongs, and Civil Order
- Wild Goose Chase: Still No Rationales for the Doctrine of Double Effect and Related Principles
- Spare No One? A Review Essay
- Wrongs, Crimes, and Criminalization
- Deferred Prosecution Agreements and the Presumption of Innocence
- Online Grooming and Preventive Justice
- Nicola Lacey: In Search of Criminal Responsibility: Ideas, Interests, and Institutions
- Bennett’s Expressive Justification of Punishment
- Defending Why Law Matters: Responses to Commentaries
- How to Think (Like a Lawyer) About Rape
- Consequences Matter More: In Defense of Instrumentalism on Private Versus Public Prisons
- The Denial of Procedural Safeguards in Trials for Regulatory Offences: A Justification
- On the Value of Constitutions and Judicial Review
- Alon Harel on How to Deliberate Permissibly
- Punishment Drift: The Spread of Penal Harm and What We Should Do About It
- Expediency, Legitimacy, and the Rule of Law: A Systems Perspective on Civil/Criminal Procedural Hybrids
- Against Personifying the Reasonable Person
- Criminal Law, Parental Authority, and the State
- Right, Crime, and Court: Toward a Unifying Political Conception of International Law
- Criminalization, Legitimacy, and Welfare
- Processes of Criminalization in Domestic and International Law: Considering Sexual Violence
- Criminalization and the Collateral Consequences of Conviction
- Corrective Justice as A Principle of Criminal Law: A Prolegomenon
- Review of Findlay Stark, Culpable Carelessness: Recklessness and Negligence in the Criminal Law
- Aspiration, Execution, and Controversy: Reply to My Critics
- Laws that are Made to be Broken
- Is Akrasia Necessary for Culpability? On Douglas Husak’s Ignorance of Law
- International Criminal Trials and the Circumstances of Justice
- Do Theories of Punishment Necessarily Deliver a Binary System of Verdicts? An Exploratory Essay
- Strict Liability and the Paradoxes of Proportionality
- Doing Without Desert
- Double Effect and the Criminal Law
- ‘Drugs That Make You Feel Bad’? Remorse-Based Mitigation and Neurointerventions
- Pereboom on Punishment: Funishment, Innocence, Motivation, and Other Difficulties
- Mass Incarceration and the Theory of Punishment
- Defense Categories and the (Category-Defying) De Minimis Defense
- Manipulation Arguments, Basic Desert, and Moral Responsibility: Assessing Derk Pereboom’s Free Will, Agency, and Meaning in Life
- Fairness-Based Retributivism Reconsidered
- Are ‘Optimistic’ Theories of Criminal Justice Psychologically Feasible? The Probative Case of Civic Republicanism
- On Pereboom’s Disappearing Agent Argument
- Lindsay Farmer: Making the Modern Criminal Law: Criminalization and Civil Order
- The Trial of Joseph Dotterweich: The Origins of the “Responsible Corporate Officer” Doctrine
- The Strictness of Strict Liability
- The Concept of Entrapment
- Strict Liability’s Criminogenic Effect
- The Responsibility Gap in Corporate Crime
- Reflections on Prince , Public Welfare Offenses, American Cyanamid , and the Wisdom of the Common Law
- Does Fault Matter?
- Can Strict Criminal Liability for Responsible Corporate Officers be Justified by the Duty to Use Extraordinary Care?
- Killing in War: Unasked Questions-Ill-Founded Legitimisation
- Incitement: A Study in Language Crime
- Probing the Depths of the Responsible Corporate Officer’s Duty
- Mens Rea by the Numbers
- Is There a Case for Strict Liability?
- The Deadly Serious Causes of Legitimate Rebellion: Between the Wrongs of Terrorism and the Crimes of War
- Self-Control in Responsibility Enhancement and Criminal Rehabilitation
- Erratum to: Defense Categories and the (Category-Defying) De Minimis Defense
- Justifying Extraterritorial War Crimes Trials
- Recklessness, Willful Ignorance, and Exculpation
- Desert as a Limiting Condition
- War Crimes: A Brief Road Map for Philosophical Inquiry
- Culpability and Irresponsibility
- Liberty and Insecurity in the Criminal Law: Lessons from Thomas Hobbes
- Legitimating Torture?
- Moving Mountains: Variations on a Theme by Shelly Kagan
- Posthumous ‘Punishment’: What May Be Done About Criminal Wrongs After the Wrongdoer’s Death?
- Infidelity and the Possibility of a Liberal Legal Moralism
- Punishment and the Appropriate Response to Wrongdoing
- A Just Criminalization of Irregular Immigration: Is It Possible?
- The Wrongs of Unlawful Immigration
- Reconsidering Illegal Hunting as a Crime of Dissent: Implication for Justice and Deliberative Uptake
- Prison on Appeal: The Idea of Communicative Incarceration
- Seumas Miller and Ian A. Gordon: Investigative Ethics: Ethics for Police Detectives and Criminal Investigators
- Could There Ever be an App for that? Consent Apps and the Problem of Sexual Assault
- The Philosophy of Criminalisation: A Review of Duff et al.’s Criminalisation Series
- Retributivism and Public Opinion: On the Context Sensitivity of Desert
- Ignorance Lost: A Reply to Yaffe on the Culpability of Willful Ignorance
- Procedural Proportionality: The Remedy for an Uncertain Jurisprudence of Minor Offence Justice
- On the Matter of Suffering: Derek Parfit and the Possibility of Deserved Punishment
- Disobedience, Civil and Otherwise
- Robotic Rape and Robotic Child Sexual Abuse: Should They be Criminalised?
- Morse, Mind, and Mental Causation
- Desert of What? On Murphy’s Reluctant Retributivism
- On Jonathan Quong’s Sectarian Political Liberalism
- What does It Mean to be a Mechanism? Stephen Morse, Non-reductivism, and Mental Causation
- On Blaming and Punishing Psychopaths
- Paternalism and Human Dignity
- Responsibility and Justificatory Defenses
- Reimagining the Unimaginable? Reflections on Mark A. Drumbl’s Vision of Child Soldiers
- ‘If the Cloak Doesn’t Fit, You Must Acquit’: Retributivist Models of Preventive Detention and the Problem of Coextensiveness
- A Defense of Free Will Skepticism: Replies to Commentaries by Victor Tadros, Saul Smilansky, Michael McKenna, and Alfred R. Mele on Free Will, Agency, and Meaning in Life
- Self-driving Cars in Dilemmatic Situations: An Approach Based on the Theory of Justification in Criminal Law
- Exploring Moral Desert
- Introduction to the Special Issue on Deontology and the Criminal Law
- Hate Speech and the Epistemology of Justice