The internal morality of criminal law

According to a popular picture, criminal law lives up to the demands of its internal morality when its norms have counterparts with the same content in morality—when it conforms to what we call the mirror principle. This article argues that the popular picture must be redrawn by relying on a second...

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Main Authors: Edwards, J, Yusari, T
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2023
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author Edwards, J
Yusari, T
author_facet Edwards, J
Yusari, T
author_sort Edwards, J
collection OXFORD
description According to a popular picture, criminal law lives up to the demands of its internal morality when its norms have counterparts with the same content in morality—when it conforms to what we call the mirror principle. This article argues that the popular picture must be redrawn by relying on a second principle, which we call the instrumental principle. Criminal law conforms to the instrumental principle when the existence of its norms helps to prevent or ameliorate moral wrongdoing. Our argument is that the instrumental principle forms part of the internal morality of criminal law, and supplies a justification for criminal laws that depart from the mirror principle. We further suggest that criminal law’s internal morality is asymmetrical: though departures from the mirror principle are sometimes justified by the instrumental principle, departures from the latter are not justified by the former.
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spelling oxford-uuid:21481c9f-70d6-48c8-80d0-343b8c78f7d32024-03-20T14:07:40ZThe internal morality of criminal lawJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:21481c9f-70d6-48c8-80d0-343b8c78f7d3EnglishSymplectic ElementsOxford University Press2023Edwards, JYusari, TAccording to a popular picture, criminal law lives up to the demands of its internal morality when its norms have counterparts with the same content in morality—when it conforms to what we call the mirror principle. This article argues that the popular picture must be redrawn by relying on a second principle, which we call the instrumental principle. Criminal law conforms to the instrumental principle when the existence of its norms helps to prevent or ameliorate moral wrongdoing. Our argument is that the instrumental principle forms part of the internal morality of criminal law, and supplies a justification for criminal laws that depart from the mirror principle. We further suggest that criminal law’s internal morality is asymmetrical: though departures from the mirror principle are sometimes justified by the instrumental principle, departures from the latter are not justified by the former.
spellingShingle Edwards, J
Yusari, T
The internal morality of criminal law
title The internal morality of criminal law
title_full The internal morality of criminal law
title_fullStr The internal morality of criminal law
title_full_unstemmed The internal morality of criminal law
title_short The internal morality of criminal law
title_sort internal morality of criminal law
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