Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Taking Responsibility for Negligence and Non-Ne...

Electronic data

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Taking Responsibility for Negligence and Non-Negligence

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Taking Responsibility for Negligence and Non-Negligence. / Williams, Garrath.
In: Criminal Law and Philosophy, Vol. 14, No. 1, 01.04.2020, p. 113-134.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Williams G. Taking Responsibility for Negligence and Non-Negligence. Criminal Law and Philosophy. 2020 Apr 1;14(1):113-134. Epub 2019 Sept 21. doi: 10.1007/s11572-019-09506-8

Author

Williams, Garrath. / Taking Responsibility for Negligence and Non-Negligence. In: Criminal Law and Philosophy. 2020 ; Vol. 14, No. 1. pp. 113-134.

Bibtex

@article{7848ee9d1489455f85a77bb7284a482a,
title = "Taking Responsibility for Negligence and Non-Negligence",
abstract = "Negligence reminds us that we often do and cause things unawares, occasionally with grave results. Given the lack of foresight and intention, some authors argue that people should not be judged culpable for negligence. This paper offers a contrasting view. It argues that gaining control (over our agency, over a risky world) is itself a fundamental responsibility, with both collective and individual elements. The paper underlines both sides, focussing on how they relate as we ascribe responsibility or culpability. Following the introduction, Section 2 (“Culpability and Control: The Negligence Sceptics”) argues that conscious awareness is neither necessary nor sufficient for control. Control is not a property of deliberate choice, so much as a practical achievement. Section 3 (“Non-negligence as a Shared Task”) stresses the collective aspects of non-negligence: creating knowledge about risks, structuring environments to guard against them, and developing standards of care. Failings in the collective task, rather than lack of individual control, mean it can often be unfair to pin culpability on a single individual. Section 4 (“Culpability for Negligence Revisited”) suggests that a basic duty of a responsible person is to acknowledge the ways in which we may do more or less than we mean to, often in ways that create risks. It then sketches an approach to culpability as part of a collective exercise: as we take responsibility for standards of care, and for our own and others{\textquoteright} agency.",
keywords = "Negligence, Culpability, Responsibility, Blame, Blame cultures, Scepticism",
author = "Garrath Williams",
year = "2020",
month = apr,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1007/s11572-019-09506-8",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "113--134",
journal = "Criminal Law and Philosophy",
issn = "1871-9791",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Taking Responsibility for Negligence and Non-Negligence

AU - Williams, Garrath

PY - 2020/4/1

Y1 - 2020/4/1

N2 - Negligence reminds us that we often do and cause things unawares, occasionally with grave results. Given the lack of foresight and intention, some authors argue that people should not be judged culpable for negligence. This paper offers a contrasting view. It argues that gaining control (over our agency, over a risky world) is itself a fundamental responsibility, with both collective and individual elements. The paper underlines both sides, focussing on how they relate as we ascribe responsibility or culpability. Following the introduction, Section 2 (“Culpability and Control: The Negligence Sceptics”) argues that conscious awareness is neither necessary nor sufficient for control. Control is not a property of deliberate choice, so much as a practical achievement. Section 3 (“Non-negligence as a Shared Task”) stresses the collective aspects of non-negligence: creating knowledge about risks, structuring environments to guard against them, and developing standards of care. Failings in the collective task, rather than lack of individual control, mean it can often be unfair to pin culpability on a single individual. Section 4 (“Culpability for Negligence Revisited”) suggests that a basic duty of a responsible person is to acknowledge the ways in which we may do more or less than we mean to, often in ways that create risks. It then sketches an approach to culpability as part of a collective exercise: as we take responsibility for standards of care, and for our own and others’ agency.

AB - Negligence reminds us that we often do and cause things unawares, occasionally with grave results. Given the lack of foresight and intention, some authors argue that people should not be judged culpable for negligence. This paper offers a contrasting view. It argues that gaining control (over our agency, over a risky world) is itself a fundamental responsibility, with both collective and individual elements. The paper underlines both sides, focussing on how they relate as we ascribe responsibility or culpability. Following the introduction, Section 2 (“Culpability and Control: The Negligence Sceptics”) argues that conscious awareness is neither necessary nor sufficient for control. Control is not a property of deliberate choice, so much as a practical achievement. Section 3 (“Non-negligence as a Shared Task”) stresses the collective aspects of non-negligence: creating knowledge about risks, structuring environments to guard against them, and developing standards of care. Failings in the collective task, rather than lack of individual control, mean it can often be unfair to pin culpability on a single individual. Section 4 (“Culpability for Negligence Revisited”) suggests that a basic duty of a responsible person is to acknowledge the ways in which we may do more or less than we mean to, often in ways that create risks. It then sketches an approach to culpability as part of a collective exercise: as we take responsibility for standards of care, and for our own and others’ agency.

KW - Negligence

KW - Culpability

KW - Responsibility

KW - Blame

KW - Blame cultures

KW - Scepticism

U2 - 10.1007/s11572-019-09506-8

DO - 10.1007/s11572-019-09506-8

M3 - Journal article

VL - 14

SP - 113

EP - 134

JO - Criminal Law and Philosophy

JF - Criminal Law and Philosophy

SN - 1871-9791

IS - 1

ER -