Collective crime and collective punishment

Criminal Justice Ethics 27 (1):4-12 (2008)
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Abstract

George Fletcher emerges in his writing, as in his life, as a colorful and highly individual figure. The last thing one expects of him is the surrender of individual identity to an anonymous submersion in the collective. Yet doctrinally he is a collectivist. In his recent writings, he has been seeking to collectivize just about everything: action, responsibility, guilt, liability, self-defense, criminal punishment, international criminal law, action in war, war crimes, and so on.

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Jeff McMahan
Oxford University

Citations of this work

The One or the Many.Jens David Ohlin - 2015 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 9 (2):285-299.

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References found in this work

Punishment and self-defense.George P. Fletcher - 1989 - Law and Philosophy 8 (2):201 - 215.

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