Rights Forfeiture and Punishment - Christopher Heath Wellman

Rights Forfeiture and Punishment

By: Christopher Heath Wellman

Paperback | 12 October 2017

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Given that persons typically have a right not to be subjected to the hard treatment of punishment, it would seem natural to conclude that the permissibility of punishment is centrally a question of rights. Despite this, the vast majority of theorists working on punishment focus instead on important aims, such as achieving retributive justice, deterring crime, restoring victims, or expressing society's core values. Wellman contends that these aims may well explain why we should want a properly constructed system of punishment, but none shows why it would be permissible to institute one. Only a rights-based analysis will suffice, because the type of justification we seek for punishment must demonstrate that punishment is permissible, and it would be permissible only if it violated no one's rights. On Wellman's view, punishment is permissible just in case the wrongdoer has forfeited her right against punishment by culpably violating (or at least attempting to violate) the rights
of others.

After defending rights forfeiture theory against the standard objections, Wellman explains this theory's implications for a number of core issues in criminal law, including the authority of the state, international criminal law, the proper scope of the criminal law and the tort/crime distinction, procedural rights, and the justification of mala prohibita.
Industry Reviews
"Christopher Heath Wellman's Rights Forfeiture and Punishment is an engaging and carefully written book. It is provocative and challenging...It is a book that proposes discussions and compels us to think meticulously about punishment and related topics." -- Gustavo A. Beade, Journal of Moral Philosophy "In this crisply written book, Christopher HeathWellman does a service to the philosophy of punishment literature." -- Kimberley Brownlee, University of Warwick, Ethics "His book cogently sets out and develops defenses of the theory that he has described in a number of recent publications, and explores its implications for such related topics as the existence of procedural rights, the moral credentials of mala prohibita offenses, and the theoretical basis of international criminal law. Wellman examines many objections to the forfeiture theory and counters them with arguments presented in a clear and lucid style and illustrated by ingenious hypotheticals ... The book offers a sophisticated presentation of that theory which covers a lot of ground and should be of value to anyone interested in that approach to the justification of criminal punishment."--David Dolinko, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews

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