•  610
    Communication, Expression, and the Justification of Punishment
    Athens Journal of Humanities and Arts 1 (4): 299-307. 2014.
    Some philosophers (Duff, Hampton) conceive of punishment as a way of communicating a message to the punished and argue that this communicative function justifies the harm of punishment. I object to communicative theories because punishment seems intuitively justified in cases in which it fails as a method of communication. Punishment fails as communication when the punished ignores the intended message or fails to understand it. Among those most likely to ignore or fail to understand the messag…Read more
  •  547
    Punishing the Oppressed and the Standing to Blame
    Res Philosophica 97 (2): 271-295. 2020.
    Philosophers have highlighted a dilemma for the criminal law. Unjust, racist policies in the United States have produced conditions in which the dispossessed are more likely to commit crime. This complicity undermines the standing of the state to blame their offenses. Nevertheless, the state has reason to punish those crimes in order to deter future offenses. Tommie Shelby proposes a way out of this dilemma. He separates the state’s right to condemn from its right to punish. I raise doubts about…Read more
  •  141
    Reactive Sentiments and the Justification of Punishment
    Philosophy and Public Issues - Filosofia E Questioni Pubbliche 5 (1): 173-205. 2015.
    Traditional justifications of punishment, deterrence theory and retributivism, are subject to counterexamples that show that they do not explain why generally we have positive reason to punish those who commit serious crimes. Nor do traditional views sufficiently explain why criminals cannot reasonably object to punishment on the grounds that it deprives them of goods to which they are usually entitled. I propose an alternative justification of punishment, grounded in its blaming function. Accor…Read more
  •  13
    Morals and Consent: Contractarian Solutions to Ethical Woes (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 72 (1): 142-143. 2018.
  •  5