Treatment for crime : philosophical essays on neurointerventions in criminal justice

Présentation de l'éditeur : "Preventing recidivism is one of the aims of criminal justice, yet existing means of pursuing this aim are often poorly effective, highly restrictive of basic freedoms, and significantly harmful. Incarceration, for example, tends to be disruptive of personal rel...

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Détails bibliographiques
Autres auteurs : Douglas Thomas (Éditeur scientifique), Birks David F. (Éditeur scientifique)
Format : Livre
Langue : anglais
Titre complet : Treatment for crime : philosophical essays on neurointerventions in criminal justice / edited by David Birks and Thomas Douglas
Publié : Oxford : Oxford University Press , 2018
Description matérielle : 1 vol. (viii-372 p.)
Collection : Engaging philosophy
Sujets :
Documents associés : Autre format: Treatment for crime
  • Part I. Setting the scene
  • 1. Biological interventions for crime prevention / Christopher Chew, Thomas Douglas, and Nadira Faber
  • 2. Crime-preventing neurointerventions and the law: learning from anti-libidinal interventions / Lisa Forsberg
  • 3. The importance of context in thinking about crime preventing neurointerventions / Matt Matravers
  • 4. Coercion and the neurocorrective offer / Jonathan Pugh
  • Part II. Defending CPNs and diffusing objections
  • 5. Moral liability to crime-preventing neurointervention / Jeff McMahan
  • 6. Neurointerventions, self-ownership, and enforcement rights / Peter Vallentyne
  • 7. The self-ownership trilemma, extended minds, and neurointerventions / Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen
  • 8. Moral paternalism and neurointerventions / Emma Bullock
  • 9. Neuroscientific treatment of criminals and penal theory / Jesper Ryberg
  • 10. Chemical castration and the violation of sexual rights / Hallie Liberto
  • 11. Neural and environmental modulation of motivation: what's the moral difference? / Thomas Douglas
  • 12. Containing violence and controlling desire / John McMillan
  • 13. Neurointerventions, morality and children / Mathew Clayton and Andres Moles
  • Part III. Against CPNs
  • 14. Intrusive intervention and opacity respect / Christopher Bennett
  • 15. Those who forget the past: an ethical challenge from the history of treating deviance / Emily McTernan
  • 16. 'The soul is the prison of the body': mandatory moral enhancement, punishment and rights against neuro-rehabilitation / Jan Christoph Bublitz
  • 17. Against the mandatory use of neurointerventions in criminal sentencing / Elizabeth Shaw
  • 18. Should coercive neurointerventions target the victims of wrongdoing? / Zofia Stemplowska
  • 19. Can neurointerventions communicate censure? (And so what if they can t?) / David Birks