Excusing crime / Jeremy Horder.

"When should someone who may have intentionally or knowingly committed criminal wrongdoing be excused? Excusing Crime examines what excusing conditions are, and why familiar excuses, such as duress, are thought to fulfil those conditions. ; The 'classical' view of excuses sees them as...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Horder, Jeremy
Format: Ebook
Language:English
Published: Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2004.
Series:Oxford monographs on criminal law and criminal justice.
Subjects:
Online Access:Oxford Scholarship Online
Table of contents
Contributor biographical information
Description
Summary:"When should someone who may have intentionally or knowingly committed criminal wrongdoing be excused? Excusing Crime examines what excusing conditions are, and why familiar excuses, such as duress, are thought to fulfil those conditions. ; The 'classical' view of excuses sees them as rational defects (such as mistake) in the motive force behind an action, but contrasts them with 'denials of responsibility', such as insanity, where the rational defect in that motive force is attributable to a mental defect in the agent him- or herself. This classical view of excuses has a long heritage, and is enshrined in different forms in many of the world's criminal codes, both liberal and non-liberal; however, in this book, Jeremy Horder contends that it is now time to move beyond it.; Horder develops a 'liberal' account of excuses, arguing that the 'classical' distinction between rational defects and 'denials of responsibility' is too sharp, and also that the classical view of excuses is too narrow. He contends that it can be right to treat claims as excusatory even if they rely on a combination of elements of rational defect in the motive force behind the action, even if that defect is in part attributable to a mental deficiency in the agent him or herself ('diminished capacity'). Further, he argues that there can be a sound case for excuse even when people can give full rational assent to their actions, such as when they could not reasonably have been expected to do more than what they did to avoid committing wrongdoing ('due diligence'), or, more rarely, when their conscience understandably left them with no moral freedom to do other than commit the wrong ('demands-of-conscience')."--Publisher description.
Item Description:Description based on print version record.
Physical Description:1 electronic document (xx, 295 p.)
Format:Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:0191580791
0191715174
9780191580796
9780191715174
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