•  186
    The logic of excuses and the rationality of emotions
    Journal of Value Inquiry 43 (3): 315-338. 2009.
    Sometimes emotions excuse. Fear and anger, for example, sometimes excuse under the headings of (respectively) duress and provocation. Although most legal systems draw the line at this point, the list of potentially excusatory emotions outside the law seems to be longer. One can readily imagine cases in which, for example, grief or despair could be cited as part of a case for relaxing or even eliminating our negative verdicts on those who performed admittedly unjustified wrongs. To be sure, the a…Read more
  •  30
    The ‘war on drugs’ has failed: Is decriminalisation of drug use a solution to the problem in South Africa?
    with R. K. Fellingham, A. Dhai, and Y. Guidozzi
    South African Journal of Bioethics and Law 5 (2). 2012.
  •  72
    The Mark of Responsibility
    Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 23 (2): 157-171. 2003.
    This paper tackles three common misconceptions about responsibility. The first misconception is that it is against our interests to be responsible for our actions. The second is that our responsibility for our actions is fixed at the time when we act. The third is that we can only be responsible to someone in particular, not responsible full stop. The three misconceptions turn out to be related, and disabusing ourselves of them helps us to rediscover the most fundamental point of the courtroom t…Read more