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Fifty Years of Criminal
Law: An Opinionated Review
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Sanford H.
Kadish
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| In this preview of what is to come in the
California Law Review 's December 2000 Twentieth
Century Symposium Issue, Professor Kadish
reflects back on what he considers the past half-century's
most significant developments in the substantive
criminal law. The most significant, Kadish
argues, is the 1962 promulgation of the Model
Penal Code--a document that inspired important
scholarly inquiry and a wave of criminal law
codification in the states, and continues to
provide highly persuasive authority to common law
judges. Next, Kadish traces developments in the
broad area of "ascertaining blame." The
author laments the persistence of notions of
strict liability in the criminal law, including
the survival of the felony-murder rule. Kadish
also follows the circular path of the insanity
defense from the early prevalence of the
M'Naghten rule through various reforms and then
back again. Also highlighted is an important
development that wasn't: the failure of the
Supreme Court to constitutionalize a fault
requirement in criminal law. In the next Part,
Kadish identifies areas in which the criminal law
has either advanced or retreated, focusing on
both the decline in "morals" offenses
such as prosecutions of consensual sexual
activity, and the great expansion of federal
crimes, including Congress's enactment of the
RICO statute and the nation's war on drugs.
Kadish then turns to the impact of feminism,
noting the effect of that social movement on the
law of rape and the emergence of the "battered
woman's syndrome" defense. Last, Kadish
notes with disapproval the recent trend away from
rehabilitation and toward severe and retributive
punishment for those convicted of crimes. |
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Copyright
© 1999 by California Law Review, Inc.
California Law Review, Inc. (CLR) is a California
nonprofit corporation.
CLR and the authors are solely responsible for
the content of their publications.
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