Conferences

Spring 2012

MAY 18 - 19

Actio Libera in Causa posterThe Ethics of Secrecy and the Rule of Law Conference

Recent events have put governmental secrecy in the news and enhanced the scrutiny of classification practices. During the Bush Administration, for example, a series of secret legal memoranda authorized the use of enhanced interrogation techniques against terror suspects. These formed a key component of the Bush administration's counterterrorism strategy. With the Obama Administration, clandestine legal memoranda have sought to justify the use of targeted killing, and one particularly controversial memo authorized the killing of an American citizen, Anwar al-Alawki. The contents of the latter have not been made public, though pressure is mounting for its release. Even the criteria by which a target is placed on the targeted killing list (the "Joint Prioritized Effects List" (JPEL)) remain confidential.

With the pressures of the ongoing War on Terror, major policies and legal questions of national importance have become less and less open to public view. The increase in secrecy is not without costs, as there appears to be a tradeoff between the need for effective security and the value of transparency. On the one hand, as Immanuel Kant wrote, "every claim to right must have this capacity for publicity." John Rawls has echoed this same sentiment in requiring publicity as a condition of the social contract. On the other hand, effective national security crucially depends on the State's ability to control the flow of information. This Roundtable will consider whether the expanding use of secrecy in governmental practices is desirable, and, most crucially, whether it is consistent with rule of law values.
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Fall 2011

DECEMBER 8 - 9

Actio Libera in Causa posterActio Libera in Causa

Actio Libera in Causa, is the criminal law doctrine involving defendants who “create the conditions of their own defense.”  The occasion for this conference is the planned publication of a special issue of the journal of Criminal Law and Philosophy on this topic.

Originally, the problem of the Actio Libera arose in connection with criminal law defenses having to do with impaired responsibility. In particular, the lack of a voluntary act defense and the (possible) defense of intoxication brought new scrutiny to the issue. The primary question is what position the law should take with regard to agents who would normally have a defense – such as involuntariness – when the defendants themselves have either manufactured the conditions that produced the lack of voluntariness or failed to take the precautions necessary to prevent those conditions.  Arguably, the epileptic who has a seizure while driving because he failed to take his medication and thereby causes the death of a pedestrian should not benefit from the lack of a voluntary act defense.  In such cases, although the excusing condition would normally reduce the culpability of the defendant, one is inclined to deny him the benefit of the defense if the defendant is at fault in creating the excusing condition. Such reasoning is likely the best explanation as to why voluntary intoxication does not excuse and involuntary intoxication does. If a defendant is intoxicated during the commission of a crime, it may reduce or wholly negate his culpability, but this does not seem as justified when the defendant chose to become intoxicated. In such instances, the conditions that reduce the voluntariness of the act are voluntarily brought about by the agent, and the rationale for reducing the defendant’s ultimate liability do not appear to obtain.

In recent writings, this same logic has been extended to defenses that have nothing to do with impaired responsibility. Consider the same situation as applied to self-defense or necessity. A defendant may have purposely arranged for an intended act of violence to be masked as a case of self-defense. He would accordingly have an excuse or justification for harming another, but he would not have had that excuse had he not arranged matters in this way. Likewise, an arsonist may be able to claim that burning down a house was necessary to create a fire break to fight a forest fire. Yet, this excuse seems insufficient when the arsonist started the forest fire so that he could justifiably burn down the house. In these cases, the individuals are fully responsible for their actions, but they have brought about the conditions of their own defense, and this leads one to the conclusion that they ought to be deprived of the defense as a result.

While the problems surrounding the Actio Libera in Causa have received extended attention in German jurisprudence, the doctrine remains relatively unexplored in Anglo-American legal thought. An important article by Paul Robinson, entitled “Causing the Conditions of One’s Own Defense,” (Virginia Law Review, Vol. 71 No. 1, 1985) brought the issue to the attention of American and British criminal law scholars, and a handful of articles and book chapters have been written on the topic since. Yet, the problem of how the criminal law should treat defendants who create the conditions of their own defense remains as vexing as ever. Of particular interest is the connection between defendants who manufacture the conditions of their own defense and what we might think of as the converse problem—agents who perform what would normally be a blameworthy act, who may nevertheless benefit from an excuse because their act is part of an overall course of conduct whose aim is defensible. Examples of the latter abound in the rational choice theory literature: the person who follows through on a deterrent threat because of an overall course of conduct of issuing and making good on threats, where the action could only be morally justified by reference to the larger plan of which it is a part. Or the person who drinks the toxin in Gregory Kavka’s famous “Toxin Puzzle,” the rationality of which can only be defended by reference to the course of conduct of which it is a part. Thus the logic Actio Libera in Causa and a certain type of case involving plans and their relation to the subpart of those plans may raise similar problems about the nature of moral reasoning.
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Spring 2011

APRIL 15 - 16
Co-sponsored by: Jean Beer Blumenfeld Center for Ethics of Georgia State

Using Targeted Killing to Fight the War on Terror: Philosophical, Moral and Legal Challenges

The Obama administration has authorized the CIA to target and kill Anwar al-Aulaqi, a radical Muslim cleric believed to have ties to al-Qaeda, on the ground that he helped to orchestrate attacks against the United States. The authorization raises the interesting question of who is a legitimate target of such military actions. In particular, it is arguably difficult to think of al-Aulaqi as a belligerent against the U.S., as he is himself an American citizen. Al-Aulaqi, however, is not the only person whose identification as a legitimate target raises moral and legal complications. The U.S. and other governments have been targeting and killing many others as part of both the fight against Islamic terrorists and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the widespread use of this technique raises important questions in just war theory. Notable as well is the fact that the U.S. has been targeting suspected militants with unmanned aerial drones, sophisticated military planes controlled remotely from distant lands.
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2010

January 22 - 23

Prioritarianism and Distributive Justice Roundtable


April 23 - 24

Foundations of International Law Conference


2009

April 30 - May 2

Hobbes Today Conference

 


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