Awareness and the recklessness/negligence distinction
Awareness and the recklessness/negligence distinction
The distinction between the criminal fault elements of recklessness and negligence is one of Anglo-American criminal law’s key distinctions. It is a distinction with practical significance, as many serious crimes require at least recklessness and cannot be committed negligently. The distinction is standardly marked by awareness. Recklessness requires awareness that one’s conduct carries a risk of harm. Negligence only requires that one ought to have been aware that one’s conduct carried such a risk, even if one was in fact unaware of this. But should the recklessness/negligence distinction be marked by awareness of risk, or by something else? Does a defendant’s awareness of risk really have the normative significance to mark such a distinction? In this paper, I answer these questions by discussing a challenge to this ‘standard account’ of the recklessness/negligence distinction raised by the work of Antony Duff, who defends an alternative, non-awareness-based model of the recklessness/negligence distinction. I will argue that, although Duff’s alternative model fails, seeing how it goes wrong helps us see how awareness genuinely does have the right kind of normative significance to mark the distinction between recklessness and negligence.
Awareness, Criminal responsibility, Negligence, Recklessness
Greenberg, Alexander
0f529d9c-1683-4f2d-94e5-2863e31a9c25
Greenberg, Alexander
0f529d9c-1683-4f2d-94e5-2863e31a9c25
Abstract
The distinction between the criminal fault elements of recklessness and negligence is one of Anglo-American criminal law’s key distinctions. It is a distinction with practical significance, as many serious crimes require at least recklessness and cannot be committed negligently. The distinction is standardly marked by awareness. Recklessness requires awareness that one’s conduct carries a risk of harm. Negligence only requires that one ought to have been aware that one’s conduct carried such a risk, even if one was in fact unaware of this. But should the recklessness/negligence distinction be marked by awareness of risk, or by something else? Does a defendant’s awareness of risk really have the normative significance to mark such a distinction? In this paper, I answer these questions by discussing a challenge to this ‘standard account’ of the recklessness/negligence distinction raised by the work of Antony Duff, who defends an alternative, non-awareness-based model of the recklessness/negligence distinction. I will argue that, although Duff’s alternative model fails, seeing how it goes wrong helps us see how awareness genuinely does have the right kind of normative significance to mark the distinction between recklessness and negligence.
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Accepted/In Press date: 4 May 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 July 2023
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
This research was funded by a Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowship (Award number: ECF-2019–406).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s).
Keywords:
Awareness, Criminal responsibility, Negligence, Recklessness
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Local EPrints ID: 478519
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478519
ISSN: 1871-9805
PURE UUID: 796a066e-ae28-40aa-9b75-64ddade6c7c2
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Date deposited: 04 Jul 2023 17:44
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:55
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