“On the State’s Exclusive Right to Punish”

  • Philosophy of Law
Law and Philosophy
2022

“The Moral Ambiguity of Public Prosecution”

  • Philosophy of Law
Yale Law Journal
2021

“Why is It Wrong to Punish Thought?”

The Law and Ethics of Freedom of Thought
2021

“May the State Punish What It May Not Prevent?”

  • Criminal Law
Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law
2020

“Demystifying Desert”

  • Criminal Law
The Journal of Ethics
2020

“Thoughts, Crimes, and Thought Crimes”

  • Criminal Law
Michigan Law Review
2020

“The Elusive Object of Punishment”

  • Criminal Law
Legal Theory
2019

“Divine Justice and the Library of Babel: Or, Was Al Capone Really Punished for Tax Evasion?”

  • Criminal Law
Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law
2018

“Why is it Wrong to Punish Thought?”

  • Criminal Law
Yale Law Journal
2018

“Theories of the Common Law of Torts”

  • Law and Social Sciences
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
2015

“What Temptation Could Not Be: A Lesson from the Criminal Law”

  • Criminal Law
Law and the Philosophy of Action
2014

“Want of Care: An Essay on Wayward Action”

Ethical Theory and Moral Practice
2013

“Is Tort Law a Form of Institutionalized Revenge?”

Florida State University Law Review
2012

Review of The Apology Ritual: A Philosophical Theory of Punishment

Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
2009

“The Good, the Bad and the Blameworthy: Understanding the Role of Evaluative Reasoning in Folk Psychology”

Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology
2004

Thought Crime

Anger and the Intricacy of Blame: An Analysis of the Provocation Defense

“The Philosophy of Policing”

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

“Justifying the Police: Some Reflections on the Crime Prevention Power”

Oxford Studies in Philosophy of Law