Wednesday, September 5, 2018

Loughnan on Responsibility and Non-Responsibility


Wednesday, September 5, 2018

 

Legal scholarly analysis of criminal responsibility is typically assumed to encompass non-responsibility. This reflects the influence on the study of criminal responsibility of the legal-philosophical tradition, in which responsibility and non-responsibility are alternative outcomes of the same moral-evaluative enquiry of calling individuals to account for their criminal conduct. This article questions that operative assumption. A close examination of four dimensions of responsibility and non-responsibility – the bases for ascription of criminal responsibility and non-responsibility, attendant rules of evidence and procedure, the temporal logics of responsibility and non-responsibility, and what I call the effects of ascribing responsibility and non-responsibility – reveals meaningful differences between responsibility and non-responsibility practices in criminal law. This article sketches out these differences and makes a case for taking them seriously, on the basis that doing so may serve as a corrective to existing scholarly accounts of criminal responsibility.

http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/crimprof_blog/2018/09/loughnan-on-responsibility-and-non-responsibility.html

| Permalink


Loughnan on Responsibility and Non-Responsibility curated from CrimProf Blog

No comments:

Post a Comment