•  68
    The function and structure of the substantive criminal law (review)
    Law and Philosophy 18 (1): 85-104. 1999.
    No Abstract
  •  173
    Intoxication and Culpability
    Criminal Law and Philosophy 6 (3): 363-379. 2012.
    I tackle the difficult problem of specifying how voluntary intoxication affects criminal culpability generally and recklessness in particular. I contend that the problem need not be conceptualized as an instance of actio libera in causa, namely the situation in which persons do something at t1 to culpably create the conditions of their own defense at t2. Instead, I argue that we need only consider intoxicated defendants at t2 in order to justify their punishment. In the course of defending my vi…Read more
  •  85
    Drug Proscriptions as Proxy Crimes
    Law and Philosophy 36 (4): 345-366. 2017.
    Our drug policy has been widely deemed a failure because the criminalization of drug use has not succeeded in reducing prevalence rates. I contend that the most promising basis to defend the justifiability of drug offenses is to construe them as proxy crimes: offenses designed to prevent the commission of other, more serious crimes. I make a case that many law enforcement officials use drug proscriptions for this purpose in the real world. When construed as proxy crimes, drug prohibitions are le…Read more
  •  118
    Rapes Without Rapists: Consent and Reasonable Mistake
    with George C. Thomas
    Noûs 35 (s1): 86-117. 2001.
  •  137
    [Book review] drugs and rights (review)
    Criminal Justice Ethics 14 (1): 63-72. 1995.
    This important book was the first serious work of philosophy to address the question: Do adults have a moral right to use drugs for recreational purposes? Many critics of the 'war on drugs' denounce law enforcement as counterproductive and ineffective. Douglas Husak argues that the 'war on drugs' violates the moral rights of adults who want to use drugs for pleasure, and that criminal laws against such use are incompatible with moral rights. This is not a polemical tract but a scrupulously argue…Read more
  •  309
    Why punish the deserving?
    Noûs 26 (4): 447-464. 1992.
  •  162
    Husak's primary goal is to defend a set of constraints to limit the authority of states to enact and enforce criminal offenses. In addition, Husak situates this endeavor in criminal theory as traditionally construed. This book urges the importance of this topic in the real world, while most Anglo-American legal philosophers have neglected it.
  •  137
    The philosophy of criminal law: selected essays
    Oxford University Press. 2010.
    Does criminal liability require an act? -- Motive and criminal liability -- The costs to criminal theory of supposing that intentions are irrelevant to permissibility -- Transferred intent -- The nature and justifiability of nonconsummate offenses -- Strict liability, justice, and proportionality -- The sequential principle of relative culpability -- Willful ignorance, knowledge, and the equal culpability thesis : a study of the significance of the principle of legality -- Rapes without rapists …Read more
  •  134
    George P. Fletcher, Basic Concepts of Criminal Law New York: Oxford University Press, 1998, xi + 223 pp.
  •  55
    Editorial: Continuity Through Change (review)
    Law and Philosophy 29 (2): 123-125. 2010.
  •  112
    Conflicts of justifications
    Law and Philosophy 18 (1). 1999.
  •  259
    Paternalism and autonomy
    Philosophy and Public Affairs 10 (1): 27-46. 1981.
  •  166
    Thirty Years of Law and Philosophy
    Law and Philosophy 30 (2): 141-142. 2011.
  •  104
    Benn on privacy and respect for persons
    with Stephen D. Hudson
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 57 (4). 1979.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  265
    Negligence, Belief, Blame and Criminal Liability: The Special Case of Forgetting
    Criminal Law and Philosophy 5 (2): 199-218. 2011.
    Commentators seemingly agree about what negligence is—and how it is contrasted from recklessness. They also appear to concur about whether particular examples (both real and hypothetical) portray negligence. I am less confident about each of these matters. I explore the distinction between recklessness and negligence by examining a type of case that has generated a good deal of critical discussion: those in which a defendant forgets that he has created a substantial and unjustifiable risk of har…Read more
  • Transferred Intent
    Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics and Public Policy 10 (1): 65-98. 1996.
  •  77
    Convergent Ends, Divergent Means: A Response to My Critics
    Criminal Justice Ethics 28 (1): 119-134. 2009.
    When writing Overcriminalization, I entertained a fantasy about the reaction my book might produce. I hoped that philosophers would not merely criticize my shortcomings but would join me to produce...
  •  126
    Date Rape, Social Convention, and Reasonable Mistakes
    with George C. Thomas I. I. I.
    Law and Philosophy 11 (1/2). 1992.
  •  67
  •  4
    Beyond the Justification/Excuse Dichotomy
    In Rowan Cruft, Matthew H. Kramer & Mark R. Reiff (eds.), Crime, punishment, and responsibility: the jurisprudence of Antony Duff, Oxford University Press. 2011.
  •  45
    Richard Henson, 1925-2007
    Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 81 (2). 2007.
  •  137
    Why There Are No Human Rights
    Social Theory and Practice 10 (2): 125-141. 1984.
  •  94
    Abetting a Crime
    Law and Philosophy 33 (1): 41-73. 2014.
    I focus on the set of problems that arise in identifying both the actus reus and (to an even greater extent) the mens rea needed by an abettor before she should be criminally liable for complicity in a crime. No consensus on these issues has emerged in positive law; commentators are enormously dissatisfied with the decisions courts have reached; and critics disagree radically about what reforms should be implemented to rectify this state of affairs. I explicitly deny that I will be able to solve…Read more