•  85
    Torts and Other Wrongs
    Oxford University Press. 2019.
    This book collects John Gardner's celebrated essays on the theory of private law, alongside two new essays. Together they range across the central puzzles in understanding the significance of outcomes, the role of justice in private law, strict liability, the reasonable person standard, and the role of public policy in tort law.
  •  371
    Complicity and causality
    Criminal Law and Philosophy 1 (2): 127-141. 2007.
    This paper considers some aspects of the morality of complicity, understood as participation in the wrongs of another. The central question is whether there is some way of participating in the wrongs of another other than by making a causal contribution to them. I suggest that there is not. In defending this view I encounter, and resist, the claim that it undermines the distinction between principals and accomplices. I argue that this distinction is embedded in the structure of rational agency
  •  152
    Action and value in criminal law (edited book)
    with Stephen Shute and Jeremy Horder
    Oxford University Press. 1993.
    In this challenging collection of new essays, leading philosophers and criminal lawyers from the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada break with the tradition of treating the philosophical foundations of criminal law as an adjunct to the study of punishment. Focusing clearly on the central issues of moral luck, mistake, and mental illness, this volume aims to reorient the study of criminal law. In the process of retrieving valuable material from traditional law classifications, the cont…Read more
  •  291
    Law and morality
    In John Skorupski (ed.), The Routledge Companion to Ethics, Routledge. 2012.
  •  74
    Destined for the Cardozo Law Review. Posted 28 November 2006.
  •  179
    How law claims, what law claims
    In Matthias Klatt (ed.), Institutionalized reason: the jurisprudence of Robert Alexy, Oxford University Press. 2012.
    In this paper, written for a volume on the work of Robert Alexy, I discuss the idea that law makes certain distinctive claims, an idea familiar from the work of both Alexy and Joseph Raz. I begin by refuting some criticisms by Ronald Dworkin of the very idea of law as a claim-maker. I then discuss whether, as Alexy and Raz agree, law's claim is a moral one. Having arrived at an affirmative verdict, I discuss the content of law's moral claim. Is it, as Alexy says, a claim to moral correctness? Or…Read more
  •  1
    Tort law and its theory
    In John Tasioulas (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to the Philosophy of Law, Cambridge University Press. 2020.
  • Action and Value in Criminal Law
    with Stephen Shute and Jeremy Hor
    Law and Philosophy 15 (1): 81-87. 1996.
  •  70
    Making sense of mens Rea: Antony duffs account
    with Jung Heike
    Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 11 (4): 559-588. 1991.
  • Discrimination as injustice
    Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 16 (3). 1996.