Results 261 to 270 of about 84,797 (287)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
2018
This chapter offers and defends a theory of criminal culpability according to which to be criminally culpable for a wrongful act is for the act to manifest faulty dispositions for recognizing, weighing, or responding to the legal reasons to refrain from the act.
openaire +1 more source
This chapter offers and defends a theory of criminal culpability according to which to be criminally culpable for a wrongful act is for the act to manifest faulty dispositions for recognizing, weighing, or responding to the legal reasons to refrain from the act.
openaire +1 more source
Texas A&M Law Review
When a child commits a crime, how do states determine if that child is culpable? There are procedural rules that determine the forum for a minor’s trial and doctrines that limit children’s exposure to the most severe sentencing. But when it comes to culpability, states employ the same substantive law whether the defendant is 50 or 15.
openaire +1 more source
When a child commits a crime, how do states determine if that child is culpable? There are procedural rules that determine the forum for a minor’s trial and doctrines that limit children’s exposure to the most severe sentencing. But when it comes to culpability, states employ the same substantive law whether the defendant is 50 or 15.
openaire +1 more source
Abstract This chapter argues that people who listen to belittling speech sometimes bear moral responsibility for the presence of belittling ideas in the common ground. This explains why people feel guilty when they are part of a conversation that involves slurs and belittling jokes.
openaire +1 more source
openaire +1 more source
2019
Abstract This chapter returns to the issue of what the normative implications of collective culpability are for members of the collective (e.g. those in government, public services, defence forces and the police). After setting aside some preliminary worries with the idea of collective punishment, the chapter argues for a distribution of
openaire +1 more source
Abstract This chapter returns to the issue of what the normative implications of collective culpability are for members of the collective (e.g. those in government, public services, defence forces and the police). After setting aside some preliminary worries with the idea of collective punishment, the chapter argues for a distribution of
openaire +1 more source

