Larry Alexander is the Warren Distinguished Professor at the University of San Diego School of Law. He is the author or co-author of five monographs, including Demystifying Legal Reasoning (Cambridge, 2008) with Emily Sherwin and Crime and Culpability: A Theory of Criminal Law (Cambridge, 2009) with Kimberly Ferzan. He is also the editor of four anthologies, and the author or co-author of multiple articles, essays, and book chapters on topics of legal theory, constitutional law, and moral philosophy.
Acknowledgements; 1. Crime and culpability: recounting the basic picture; Part I. Problems and Puzzles of Risking: 2. Risking other people's riskings; 3. Risks and 'other law' beliefs; 4. Omissions and culpable riskings: problems, problems; 5. Is there a case for proxy crimes? Part II. Problems and Puzzles of Culpability: 6. Moral ignorance; 7. The violator of deontological constraints; 8. Mass murders, recidivists, and volume discounts; Part III. Problems and Puzzles of Punishment: 9. The problem of psychological disconnection between the culpable actor and the person to be punished; 10. Distributing retributive desert; Part IV. Conclusion: 11. Conclusion; Index.