| ... |
... |
@@ -1,0
+1,21 @@ |
|
1 |
+Value Legal Justice |
|
2 |
+ |
|
3 |
+Must hold right people accountable |
|
4 |
+Robinson et al: Robinson, Paul H. Professor of Law, Northwestern University School of Law, and John M. Darley Dorman T. Warren Professor of Psychology, Princeton University “The Utility of Desert.” Northwestern University Law Review, Vol. 91, No. 2, 1997. RP |
|
5 |
+Our central point |
|
6 |
+AND |
|
7 |
+effectively reduce crime |
|
8 |
+ |
|
9 |
+Reciprocity is important |
|
10 |
+Rachels shows: Rachels, James. American Philosopher “Punishment and Desert.” In Ethics in Practice, edited by Hugh LaFollette. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1997. RP |
|
11 |
+To these reasons |
|
12 |
+AND |
|
13 |
+system to be effective. |
|
14 |
+ |
|
15 |
+Thus, the sufficient affirmative burden is to prove that limiting qualified immunity treats police with the level of culpability they deserve. A deserved level of culpability shows a causal link between actor and harm. Thus, the affirmative must demonstrate that police officers are at fault for the harms for which they’re blamed. |
|
16 |
+ |
|
17 |
+Police misconduct comes from police culture |
|
18 |
+Armacost: Armacost, Barbara E. Professor of Law, University of Virginia School of Law “Organizational Culture and Police Misconduct.” 72 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 453, March 2004. CH |
|
19 |
+As the discussion |
|
20 |
+AND |
|
21 |
+needed institutional reform. |