Description |
viii, 383 pages ; 24 cm |
Series |
Law, justice, and power |
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Law, justice, and power.
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Contents |
Pt. I. Factual consent -- 1. A core conception of consent : an attitude of factual acquiescence -- 2. An expression of factual acquiescence -- Pt. II. Legal consent -- 3. Offenses to which consent is a defense -- 4. Prescriptive consent : an attitude or an expression? -- 5. Prescriptive attitudinal consent -- 6. Non-contemporaneous prescriptive consent -- 7. Imputed consent -- Pt. III. The consequences of conceptual complexity -- 8. The confusions of consent |
Summary |
"The Logic of Consent analyzes the varied nature of consent arguments in criminal law and examines the confusions that commonly arise from the failure of legislatures, courts and commentators to understand them. Peter Westen argues that the conceptual aspect accounts for a significant number of the difficulties that legislatures, courts and scholars have with consent in criminal cases; he observes that consent masquerades as a single kind of event when, in reality, it refers to diverse and sometimes mutually exclusive kinds of events. Specifically, consent is used in law to refer to three pairs of contrasting kinds of events : factual versus legal, attitudinal versus expressive, and prescriptive versus imputed. While Westen takes no position on whether the substance of existing defenses of consent in criminal law ought to be enlarged or reduced in scope, he examines each of these contrasting events and analyzes the normative confusions they produce."--BOOK JACKET |
Notes |
Formerly CIP. Uk |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages [351]-366) and index |
Subject |
Consent (Law)
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Defense (Criminal procedure)
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Consent (Law) -- United States.
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Criminal liability -- United States.
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Defense (Criminal procedure) -- United States.
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Rape -- United States.
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LC no. |
2003063821 |
ISBN |
0754624072 alkaline paper |
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