Acknowledgements
Introduction
PART I: Foundations
Chapter 1: Criminal Law Basics and the Willful Ignorance
Doctrine
Chapter 2: What Is Criminal Culpability?
Part II: From Willful Ignorance to a Theory of Equal Culpability
Imputation
Chapter 3: The Scope of the Willful Ignorance Doctrine (I)
Chapter 4: The Scope of the Willful Ignorance Doctrine (II): The
Duty to Reasonably Inform Oneself
Chapter 5: Toward a Normative Theory of Equal Culpability
Imputation
Part III: Beyond Willful Ignorance
Chapter 6: Iterated Reckless Ignorance as a Substitute for
knowledge
Chapter 7: Substituting Willful Ignorance for Purpose?
Chapter 8: Sub-Willful Motivated Ignorance
Chapter 9: Corporations Keeping Themselves in the Dark
Conclusion
Alexander Sarch is a Reader (Associate Professor) and Interim Head of School at the University of Surrey, School of Law.
"This is an excellent book. It's clear and well-argued, and any
philosopher working on wilful ignorance and other culpability
imputation principles is going to have to engage with it." --
Alexander Greenberg, Department of Philosophy, University College
London, Journal of Moral Philosophy
"The paucity of books on legal fiction is in part due to the
density of the concept, but Sarch flushes out some of that density
through deliberative and clear prose. An important book in the
field, Criminally Ignorant is best suited to legal scholars. ...
Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty."
-- A. R. S. Lorenz, Choice
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