International Journal of Applied Philosophy

Volume 14, Issue 1, Spring 2000

Stephen Kershnar
Pages 97-117

A Defense of Retributivism

Cited by

  • Gregg D. Caruso. The Palgrave Handbook on the Philosophy of Punishment 2023: 489. [CrossRef]
  • Clinton Castro, Alan Rubel, Lindsey Schwartz. Inquiry. Does predictive sentencing make sense? 2024. [CrossRef]
  • Eric D. Blumenson, Victor Tadros. SSRN Electronic Journal. A Criminal's Duty to Go to Jail? Four Arguments Against Tadros' Philosophy of Punishment, with Responses by Victor Tadros 2013. [CrossRef]
  • Nathan Hanna. Criminal Law and Philosophy. Hitting Retributivism Where It Hurts 2019. [CrossRef]
  • Peter Königs. Philosophical Psychology. Two types of debunking arguments 2018. [CrossRef]
  • Hsin-Wen Lee. The Palgrave Handbook on the Philosophy of Punishment 2023: 149. [CrossRef]
  • Derk Pereboom. Neuroethics. Incapacitation, Reintegration, and Limited General Deterrence 2020. [CrossRef]
  • Toby Napoletano, Hanna Kiri Gunn. Criminal Justice Ethics. Can Retributivism and Risk Assessment Be Reconciled? 2024. [CrossRef]
  • Daniel D'Hotman, Jonathan Pugh, Thomas Douglas. The Lancet. Methadone for prisoners 2016. [CrossRef]
  • Gregg D. Caruso. Neuroethics. Justice without Retribution: An Epistemic Argument against Retributive Criminal Punishment 2020. [CrossRef]
  • Peter Königs. Ethical Theory and Moral Practice. The Expressivist Account of Punishment, Retribution, and the Emotions 2013. [CrossRef]
  • Andrea Lavazza, Sergei Levin, Mirko Farina. Philosophia. The Quarantine Model and its Limits 2023. [CrossRef]
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