-
12The "New Balance" Approach to Punishment and Its Utilitarian and Retributivist RivalsThe Proceedings of the Twenty-First World Congress of Philosophy 3 23-28. 2007.This essay investigates the possibility of veering from an approach of doing bad to the offender as the primary response to crime to one of requiring the offender to do good. This approach, in effect, has us offset the evil which the offender has placed on the scales of justice with good which the offender is required to produce; hence the conception of New Balance. The specific focus here is to identify important deficiencies in the major approaches of retributivism and utilitarian-deterrence t…Read more
-
22Appeal to the people's court: rethinking law, judging, and punishmentBrill-Rodopi. 2018.People's courts and legal philosophy -- Spotlight on people's courts -- Law -- Judging -- Punishment.
-
26A Case for Legal Ethics: Legal Ethics as a Source for a Universal EthicState University of New York Press. 1993.Luizzi (philosophy, Southwest Texas State U.) claims both. Paper edition (unseen), $14.95. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portla
-
A Naturalistic Theory of Justice--A Critique of C. I. Lewis' EthicsDissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 1973.
-
59Problems with solutions to contemporary moral problemsJournal of Value Inquiry 18 (3): 169-180. 1984.
-
104Some dissatisfaction with satisfaction: Universities, values, and quality (review)Journal of Business Ethics 25 (4). 2000.This article moves beyond the narrow discussion of the applicability of Total Quality Management to the university which has amounted to a debate over whether business has something to teach the university about customers and satisfaction. The article goes at the matter from a different direction as it investigates what business can learn from the university about quality.
San Marcos, Texas, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Applied Ethics |
| Philosophy of Law |
Areas of Interest
| Applied Ethics |
| Philosophy of Law |