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Moral Pluralism and the Complexity of Punishment
Details
This book advances a new interpretation of Hart's penal philosophy. Positioning itself in opposition to current interpretations, the book argues that Hart's penal philosophy is based on his moral pluralism, which comprises two aspects: value pluralism and pluralism with respect to forms of moral reason.
Autorentext
Nicolas Nayfeld is a postdoctoral fellow at Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, where he teaches philosophy of law.
Klappentext
This book advances a new interpretation of Hart's penal philosophy. Positioning itself in opposition to current interpretations, the book argues that Hart's penal philosophy is based on his moral pluralism, which comprises two aspects: value pluralism and pluralism with respect to forms of moral reason.
Inhalt
Acknowledgements
Introduction
I. A mixed theory of punishment?
II. A form of rule utilitarianism?
III. A liberal form of utilitarianism?
IV. A goal/constraint approach?
Desert scepticism
An oversimplified interpretation
1 The foundations of Hart's master idea
I. The distinction of issues
II. Value pluralism
Berlin's value pluralism
Hart's value pluralism
Value pluralism and the question of distribution
III. Pluralism about forms of moral reason
Nagel and the fragmentation of value
Hart's pluralism about forms of moral reason
Pluralism about forms of moral reason and the question of justification
IV. The problem of moral conflicts
Back to Aristotle
Hart and judicial virtues
V. Hart's anti-reductivist stance
2 The definition of punishment
I. Hart's definition of standard punishment
Hart's reflections on definitions
The origins of Hart's definition
Quinton's subterfuge
Rawls' logical argument
II. A revision of Hart's definition
Must punishment involve consequences normally considered unpleasant?
Must punishment be for an offence against legal rules?
Must punishment be of an actual or supposed offender for their offence?
Must punishment be intentionally administered by human beings other than the offender?
Must punishment be imposed and administered by an authority constituted by a legal system against which the offence is committed?
The expressive objection
III. Conceptual distinctions
The act of punishing versus the practice of punishing
The practice of legal punishment versus the penal system
Legal punishment versus criminal law
Punishment versus threats
Punishment versus taxes
Punishment versus measures
3 The justification of punishment
I. A clarification of the question of justification
A normative issue
What does it mean to justify?
Punishment on trial
The burden of justification
II. The Benthamian justification
From Bentham to Hart
Is punishment a lesser evil?
Is punishment a necessary evil?
Objections
III. The right-based justification
Retributive justifications
Expressive justifications
Right-based justifications
4 Criminal responsibility
I. The origin of Hart's rule of responsibility
II. The meaning of Hart's rule of responsibility
The perpetrator of an illegal act
Capacities: the key to exemptions
Fair opportunity: the key to excuses
Necessity: the key to justifications
Conclusion (with a remark on mental disorder)
III. The justification of Hart's rule of responsibility
Hart's criticism of the utilitarian justification
Hart's pluralist justification
IV. Determinism and Hart's rule of responsibility
What is determinism?
Compatibilism
Incompatibilism
5 Sentencing
I. Hart's principles regarding the quality/quantity of punishment
Ordinal proportionality: maximum penalties should be proportional
Humanity: no one shall be subjected to inhuman or degrading punishment
Equality of treatment: treat like cases alike and different cases differently
Individualization: sentences should be individualized without exceeding the maximum penalty
II. The justification of Hart's principles regarding the quality/ quantity of punishment
The justification of ordinal proportionality
The justification of humanity
The justification of equality of treatment
The justification of individualization
6 The Hart/Wootton debate
I. Identifying offenders
II. Dealing with offenders
III. Wootton's arguments
IV. Hart's objections
Conclusion
Index
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09781032271248
- Anzahl Seiten 210
- Herausgeber Routledge
- Gewicht 340g
- Größe H234mm x B156mm
- Jahr 2024
- EAN 9781032271248
- Format Kartonierter Einband
- ISBN 978-1-032-27124-8
- Veröffentlichung 08.10.2024
- Titel Moral Pluralism and the Complexity of Punishment
- Autor Nicolas Nayfeld
- Untertitel The Penal Philosophy of H.L.A. Hart
- Sprache Englisch