Criminalizing Sex: A Unified Liberal Theory (Oxford University Press, forthcoming in 2020)
Thirteen Ways to Steal a Bicycle: Theft Law in the Information Age (Harvard University Press, 2012)
Philosophical Foundations of Criminal Law (co-edited with R.A. Duff) (Oxford University Press, 2011; paperback edition, 2013)
Lying, Cheating, and Stealing: A Moral Theory of White Collar Crime (Oxford University Press, 2006; paperback edition, 2007)
Defining Crimes: Essays on the Special Part of the Criminal Law (co-edited with R.A. Duff) (Oxford University Press, 2005)
“Should it be a Crime to Spread the Coronavirus?” N.Y. Daily News (May 19, 2020)
“Harvey Weinstein and the Decriminalization of Prostitution,” OUP blog (March 23, 2020)
“No, the Harvey Weinstein Verdict Isn’t a Judgment on #MeToo Itself,” New York Daily News (Feb. 19, 2020)
“The Looming Question in Rape Law After Harvey Weinstein,” Wall Street Journal (Jan. 3, 2020)
“In College Admissions, Like Politics, the Scandal is What’s Legal” (with Deborah Hellman), Ozy.com (March 14, 2019)
“Bribery, Crowdfunding, and the Strange Case of Senator Susan Collins” (with Deborah Hellman), The Atlantic.com (Sept. 14, 2018)
“When a Bribe is Not a Bribe,” Newark Star-Ledger (Oct. 8, 2017)
“I’m Banning Laptops from My Classroom,” Wall Street Journal (July 11, 2016)
“The ‘Must-Steal’ Product of the Season,” New York Times Room for Debate (January 14, 2013)
“Everybody Lies, Especially to Themselves,” Haaretz (July 2012) (reviewing Dan Ariely, The (Honest) Truth About Dishonesty)
“When Stealing Isn’t Stealing,” New York Times (March 28, 2012)
“Why Do People Cheat on their Taxes?,” CNBC.com (April 8, 2011)
“Sestak, Clinton, and Obama: Was it a Bribe?,” Christian Science Monitor (May 28, 2010)
“iPhone, Gizmodo, and Moral Clarity about Crime,” Christian Science Monitor (May 4, 2010)
“Don’t Make My Day,” Haaretz (Israel) (March 14, 2008)
“Note to O.J.: Call the Dream Team,” Boston Globe (September 18, 2007)
“Divestment Dilemma: Shareholders Must Shoulder Some of the Blame for Corporate Malfeasance,” Worth (May 2007)
“The Coverup Paradox,” Boston Globe (March 8, 2007); also published as “Fair or Unfair? Some Defenders of I. Lewis Libby Say His Conviction Was No Big Deal. But the Evidence Suggests Otherwise,” Philadelphia Inquirer (March 8, 2007)
“Rideau and Killen Trials: When Justice Is Delayed,” National Law Journal (January 31, 2005)
“Guest Comment: Free Speech, Free Underwear,” Detroit Free Press (October 13, 2004)
“We Should Consider Prosecuting the Catholic Church,” Houston Chronicle (April 19, 2002)
“Historian Broke the Rules, But Is That So Bad?,” Los Angeles Times (January 14, 2002)
“Legal Moralism, Overinclusive Offenses, and the Problem of Wrongfulness Conflation,” forthcoming in symposium issue of Criminal Law and Philosophy
“Incest,” in Larry Alexander and Kim Ferzan (eds.), Palgrave Handbook on Applied Ethics and the Criminal Law (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2020) pp. 337-57
“The Legal Enforcement of Integrity,” forthcoming in Christian B. Miller and Ryan West (eds.), Integrity, Honesty, and Truth-Seeking (Oxford University Press)
“To See and Be Seen: Reconstructing the Law of Voyeurism and Exhibitionism,” 54 American Criminal Law Review 203 (2018)
“Lying and the Law,” in Jörg Meibauer (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Lying (Oxford University Press, 2018)
“Tax Evasion as Crime,” in Monica Bhandari (ed.), Philosophical Foundations of Tax Law (Oxford University Press, 2017)
“What Counts as Prostitution?”, 4 Bergen Journal of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice 65 (2016)
“The Conceptual Utility of Malum Prohibitum,” 55 Dialogue: the Canadian Philosophical Review 33 (2016)
“What are the Sexual Offences?,” in Chad Flanders and Zach Hoskins (eds.), The New Philosophy of Crimina Law (Rowman Littlefield, 2015)
“Lies, Rape, and Statutory Rape,” in Austin Sarat (ed.), Law and Lies: Deception and Truth-Telling in the American Legal System (Cambridge University Press, 2015)
“Offenses Against Property,” in Markus Dubber and Tatjana Hörnle (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Criminal Law (Oxford University Press, 2014)
“Official Bribery and Commercial Bribery: Should They Be Distinguished?,” in Jeremy Horder and Peter Alldridge (eds.), Modern Bribery Law: Comparative Perspectives (Cambridge University Press, 2013)
“Vice Crimes and Preventive Justice,” 8 Criminal Law and Philosophy (2013)
Foreword to New England Law Review symposium on Thirteen Ways to Steal a Bicycle (2013)
Prefacio a la edicion en Castellano, Mentir, hacer trampas y apropiarse de lo ajeno (Marcel Pons Publishers, 2013) (preface to Spanish edition of Lying, Cheating, and Stealing: A Moral Theory of White Collar Crime)
Foreword to Symposium on Vice and the Criminal Law, 7 Criminal Law & Philosophy 3 (2013)
“Bribery,” in Lawrence M. Salinger (ed.), Encyclopedia of White-Collar and Corporate Crime (Sage Reference, 2d ed., 2013)
“When is it Wrong to Trade Stocks on the Basis of Non-Public Information? Public Views of the Morality of Insider Trading” (with Matthew Kugler), 39 Fordham Urban Law Journal 445 (2012) (symposium).
“Public Perceptions of White Collar Crime Seriousness: Bribery, Perjury, and Fraud” (with Matthew Kugler), 75 Law & Contemporary Problems 33 (2012) (symposium)
“Cheating,” “Strict Liability,” and “White Collar Crime,” in Hugh LaFollette (ed.), International Encyclopedia of Ethics (Wiley-Blackwell, forthcoming 2012)
“Thieving and Receiving: Overcriminalizing the Possession of Stolen Property,” 14 New Criminal Law Review 35 (2011)
“Taking it to the Streets,” 89 Texas Law Review 61 (2011) (responding to Paul Robinson, Michael Cahill, and Daniel Bartels, “Competing Theories of Blackmail: An Empirical Research Critique of Criminal Law Theory”)
“Hard Times, Hard Time: Retributive Justice for Unjustly Disadvantaged Offenders,” in 2010 University of Chicago Legal Forum 21-48 (symposium), published in revised form as “Just Deserts in Unjust Societies: A Case-Specific Approach,” in Philosophical Foundations of Criminal Law, above
“Golden Rule Ethics and the Death of the Criminal Law’s Special Part,” 29 Criminal Justice Ethics 208 (2010) (reviewing Larry Alexander & Kim Ferzan, Crime and Culpability)
“Theft by Omission,” in James Chalmers, Lindsay Farmer, and Fiona Leverick (eds.), Essays in Criminal Law in Honour of Sir Gerald Gordon (Edinburgh University Press, 2010)
“Community Perceptions of Theft Seriousness: A Challenge to Model Penal Code and English Theft Act Consolidation” (with Matthew Kugler), 7 Journal of Empirical Legal Studies 511 (2010)
“What is Wrong with Tax Evasion?,” 9 Houston Business and Tax Law Journal 221 (2009)
“Is There Too Much Criminal Law?,” 6 Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law 737 (2009) (reviewing Douglas Husak, Overcriminalization)
“Why Do Privately-Inflicted Criminal Sanctions Matter?” and “Sharing Wrongs Between Criminal and Civil Sanctions,” in Paul H. Robinson, Stephen Garvey, and Kimberly Ferzan (eds.), Criminal Law Conversations (Oxford University Press, 2009)
“Moral Ambiguity in White Collar Criminal Law,” 18 Notre Dame J. Law, Ethics, and Public Policy 501 (2004)
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