1. The Ethics of Pleading Guilty and the State Response to Self-convicting Offenders
Julian V Roberts (University of Oxford, UK) and Jesper Ryberg (Roskilde University, Denmark)
2. When Should We Plead Guilty?
RA Duff (University of Stirling, UK)
3. Guilty Plea, Sentencing Discounts and Retributivism
Jesper Ryberg (Roskilde University, Denmark)
4. Guilty Pleas, Sentencing Reductions, and Non-punishment of the Innocent
Zachary Hoskins (University of Nottingham, UK)
5. Rewarding Virtue: An Ethical Defence of Plea-based Sentence Reductions
Julian V Roberts (University of Oxford, UK) and Netanel Dagan (Hebrew University, Israel)
6. The Limited Moral Relevance of Pleas and Verdicts
Adam Kolber (Brooklyn Law School, USA)
7. The Guilty Plea and Self-Respect
Gabrielle Watson (University of Oxford, UK)
8. Why Should Guilty Pleas Matter?
Thom Brooks (Durham University, UK)
9. Victim-related Assumptions Underlying Plea-based Sentence Reductions: A Communicative and Experiential Framework
Marie Manikis (McGill University, Canada)
10. Plea-Based Sentence Reductions: Legal Assumptions and Empirical Realities
Rebecca Helm (University of Exeter, UK)
11. Plea Negotiations and Mitigation
Mike Hough (Birkbeck, University of London, UK) and Jessica Jacobson (Birkbeck, University of London, UK)
12. Guilty Pleas, Fools' Bargains and Wonderful Justice
Leo Zaibert (Union College, USA)