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  1. Preventive Justice and the Presumption of Innocence.Kimberly Kessler Ferzan - 2014 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 8 (2):505-525.
    When the state aims to prevent responsible and dangerous actors from harming its citizens, it must choose between criminal law and other preventive techniques. The state, however, appears to be caught in a Catch-22: using the criminal law raises concerns about whether early inchoate conduct is properly the target of punishment, whereas using the civil law raises concerns that the state is circumventing the procedural protections available to criminal defendants. Andrew Ashworth has levied the most serious charge against civil preventive (...)
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  • Criminalizing Dangerousness: How to Preventively Detain Dangerous Offenders.Susan Dimock - 2015 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 9 (3):537-560.
    I defend a form of preventive detention through the creation of an offence of ‘being a persistent violent dangerous offender’. This differs from alternative proposals and actual habitual offender laws that impose extra periods of incarceration on offenders after they have completed the sentence for their most recent crime or as a result of a certain number of prior convictions. I, instead, would make ‘being a persistent violent dangerous offender’ an offence itself. Persons to be preventively detained would be tried (...)
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  • Taking Rights Seriously.Ronald Dworkin - 1979 - Mind 88 (350):305-309.
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  • Punishment, Communication, and Community.R. A. Duff - 2003 - Philosophical Quarterly 53 (211):310-313.
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