faculty footnotes From publishing scholarly articles and books to organizing conferences, the USD School of Law faculty is committed to advancing the study and practice of law. In these pages, learn how our professors are impacting law at national and global levels.
Larry Alexander Larry Alexander’s book chapter “Voluntary Enslavement” was published in Paternalism: Theory and Practice (Coons and Weber, eds.) (Cambridge University Press, 2013). Other book chapters published include “Reply: Fletcher on The Fault of Not Knowing” in Fletcher’s Essays on Criminal Law (with Ferzan) (Christopher, ed.) (Oxford University Press, 2013); “SelfDefense” in The Routledge Companion to Philosophy of Law (Marmor, ed.) (Routledge, 2012); “Risk and Inchoate Crimes: Retribution or Prevention?” in Seeking Security: Pre-Empting the Commission of Criminal Harms 103 (with Ferzan) (Sullivan et al., eds.) (Hart Publishing Ltd., 2012); “Precedential Constraint, Its Scope and Strength: A Brief Survey of the Possibilities and Their Merits” in On the Philosophy of Precedent (Bustamente et al., eds.) (2012); and “Legal Objectivity and the Illusion of Legal Principles” in Institutionalized
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Reason: The Jurisprudence of Robert Alexy (Klatt, ed.) (Oxford University Press, 2012). Alexander published numerous articles, including “Other People’s Errors” in Ethical Theory and Moral Practice (January 2013); “You Got What You Deserved” 6 Criminal Law and Philosophy (June 2012); “Danger: The Ethics of Preemptive Action” in 9 Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law 637 (with Ferzan) (2012); “The Method of Text and ?: Jack Balkin’s Originalism with No Regrets” in Illinois Law Review 611 (2012); and “What’s Inside and Outside the Law?” in 31 Law & Philosophy 213 (2012). His forthcoming articles include “What Are Principles and Do They Exist?” (forthcoming 2014); “Recipe for a Theory of Self-Defense: The Ingredients and Some Cooking Suggestions” (forthcoming 2014); “The Means Principle” in Criminal Law & Philosophy (forthcoming 2014); “The Objectivity of Morality, Rules and Law: A Conceptual Map” in Alabama Law Review (forthcoming