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Article

A criminal law we can call our own?

Details

Citation

Duff RA (2017) A criminal law we can call our own?. Northwestern University Law Review, 111 (6), pp. 1491-1506. http://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/nulr/vol111/iss6/6/

Abstract
This Essay sketches an ideal of criminal law¡ªof the kind of criminal law that we can call our own as citizens of a democratic republic. The elements of that ideal include a republican theory of liberal democracy, as the kind of polity in which we can aspire to live; an account of the role of criminal law in such a polity, as defining a set of public wrongs and providing an appropriate formal, public response to the commission of such wrongs through the criminal process of trial and punishment; and a discussion of how the citizens of such a polity will relate to their criminal law and of the various active roles that they will be ready to play in the law¡¯s enterprise. This account does not aim to describe, or to justify, our existing systems of criminal law. Instead, it offers a normative ideal against which we can judge our existing institutions, and towards which we can strive to reform them.

Journal
Northwestern University Law Review: Volume 111, Issue 6

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2017
Publication date online24/08/2017
Date accepted by journal24/08/2017
URL
PublisherNorthwestern University
Publisher URL
ISSN0029-3571

People (1)

Professor Antony Duff

Professor Antony Duff

Emeritus Professor, Philosophy