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    The criminal law portrays crime not merely as conduct whi... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Whether our inquiry into crime is analytical or normative, we must focus on the notion of wrongdoing.

    The criminal law portrays crime not merely as conduct which has been prohibited, but as a species of wrongdoing.

    Justice & Punishment
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    The simple positivist-consequentialist view of criminal law is inadequate.Whether our inquiry into crime is analytical or normative, we must focus on the ...

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    On a simple positivist view of law, crimes are kinds of conduct that are prohibited, on pain of threatened sanctions, by the law; and for positivists such as Bentham, who combine positivism with a normative consequentialism, the questions of whether we should maintain a criminal law at all, and of what kinds of conduct should be criminalised, are to be answered by trying to determine whether and when this method of controlling human conduct is likely to produce a net increase in good. Such a perspective seems inadequate, however: inadequate both to the claims of the criminal law, which present...

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