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122R. S. Peters on punishmentBritish Journal of Educational Studies 20 (3): 259-269. 1972.No abstract
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107Police Loyalties: A Refuge for Scoundrels?Professional Ethics, a Multidisciplinary Journal 5 (1): 29-42. 1996.
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Megan's Law: Community Notification of the Release of Sex OffendersCriminal Justice Ethics 14 (2): 3-4. 1995.
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168Legitimate and Illegitimate Uses of Police ForceCriminal Justice Ethics 33 (2): 83-103. 2014.Utilizing a contractualist framework for understanding the basis and limits for the use of force by police, this article offers five limiting principles—respect for status as moral agents, proportionality, minimum force necessary, ends likely to be accomplished, and appropriate motivation—and then discusses uses of force that violate or risk violating those principles. These include, but are not limited to, unseemly invasions, strip searches, perp walks, handcuffing practices, post-chase apprehe…Read more
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The foundations of bioethics H. Tristram Engelhardt, jr (review)Journal of Applied Philosophy 4 (2): 250. 1987.
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62Handled with Discretion: Ethical Issues in Police Decision Making (edited book)Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 1996.Criticisms of how police exercise their authority are neither new nor uncommon. Police officers have considerable power, and they often must draw on that power in complex and pressing circumstances. This collection of essays by fifteen leading specialists in ethics and criminal justice examines the nature of police discretion and its many varieties. The essays explore the kinds of judgment calls police officers frequently must make: When should they get involved? Whom should they watch? What con…Read more
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2Torture and political moralityIn Igor Primoratz (ed.), Politics and morality, Palgrave-macmillan. 2007.
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111Freewill and Determinism (review)Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 18 (n/a): 260-262. 1969.The distinctiveness of this addition to the already vast literature on the freewill controversy is shown by its subtitle. Professor Franklin believes that what is ultimately at stake in the debate is not conceptual clarification, but our fundamental values and conception of man. Paraphrasing Hare: to justify a position completely, we have to give a complete specification of the way of life of which it is a part.
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9Ethical Challenges for Intervening in Drug Use: Policy, Research, and Treatment IssuesCriminal Justice Ethics 26 (2): 72. 2007.
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2MURPHY, J. G., "Retribution, Justice and Therapy. Essays in the Philosophy of Law" (review)Australasian Journal of Philosophy 59 (n/a): 352. 1981.
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77The Paternalistic PrincipleCriminal Law and Philosophy 10 (2): 315-327. 2016.In this paper, I critique one aspect of Simester and von Hirsch’s, Crimes, Harms, and Wrongs—their recognition of harm and offence principles, but failure to construct a paternalistic principle, despite their willingness to countenance some small measure of criminal paternalism. Construction of such a principle would have clarified the problems of as well as the limits to criminalising paternalism.
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155The Ethical Perils of Knowledge AcquisitionCriminal Justice Ethics 28 (2): 201-222. 2009.At first blush, there would seem to be few ethical problems with knowledge acquisition in a law enforcement context. For that context is one of public safety and criminal justice, both worthy ends,...
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42Reason, Truth and God (review)Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 20 (n/a): 369-371. 1971.The material for this book was originally presented as the Stanton Lectures in the Philosophy of Religion at Cambridge in 1963. Its argument operates on a number of levels. Superficially, though explicitly, it is a defence of Wittgenstein and his followers against two charges, first, of ignoring the larger questions of epistemology discussed by their predecessors, and second, of removing philosophy from any concern with the practical issues of life. On another level it gives a commentary on the …Read more
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58IntroductionCriminal Justice Ethics 28 (1): 25-26. 2009.For what kinds of conduct may we impose on people the condemnatory sanction of legal punishment? Or, what may be viewed as its echo, what kinds of behavior may we legitimately criminalize? For it m...
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John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY)Retired faculty
New York City, New York, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Value Theory |
Areas of Interest
1 more
| Applied Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| Philosophy of Law |
| Meta-Ethics |
| Value Theory |