The Moral Limits of the Criminal Law: Volume 3: Harm to Self

Joel Feinberg author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc

Published:17th Aug '89

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Moral Limits of the Criminal Law: Volume 3: Harm to Self cover

The Moral Limits of Criminal Law is a four-volume work that answers the question: what kinds of conduct may a legislature make criminal without infringing the moral autonomy of individual citizens? Volume three, 'Harm to Self', tackles the riddles associated with the commonly proposed principle called 'legal Paternalism'. It evaluates (and rejects) the principle that it can be right to impose coercion on a person 'for his own good', whatever his own wishes in the matter. Chapters in this section discuss the concept of personal autonomy (or 'sovereignty'), voluntariness, and assumption of risk, as well as 'failures of consent' because of duress, fraud, and other factors incompatible with voluntary behaviour.

'it is comprehensive, systematic, argued with a rigour and scrupulousness unmatched, let alone surpassed, in any comparable study' Times Literary Supplement

ISBN: 9780195059236

Dimensions: 236mm x 157mm x 25mm

Weight: 621g

448 pages