Publication
Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy
Volume
42
Page
170
Year
2013
Abstract
This paper considers the roles that may be played by a “presumption of innocence” outside the criminal trial — a presumption that reflects a general principle of civic trust. We can understand the significance of this presumption, and the ways in which it can be qualified (without being defeated) by attending to some of the normative roles that citizens might take on, or have imposed on them, in relation to the criminal law, and the responsibilities or duties that attach to those roles. Particular attention is paid to the distinctive roles of “defendant” and of “ex-offender”, and to the question of whether it can be consistent with the presumption of innocence to treat either defendants or those who have completed their punishments as, if not guilty, at least far from unqualifiedly innocent. presumption of innocence, civil trust, defendants' rights and responsibilities, bail, ex-offenders
Recommended Citation
Antony Duff, Who Must Presume Whom to Be Innocent of What?, 42 Neth. J. Legal. Phil. 170 (2013), available at https://scholarship.law.umn.edu/faculty_articles/1016.