Professor Re’em Segev holds the Ivan C. Rand Chair in Criminal Law at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research focuses on moral philosophy and philosophy of law (mainly criminal law and discrimination law) and the relationship between these fields. His articles have been published in philosophical and legal journals such as the Australasian Journal of Philosophy, Philosophical Studies, Ergo, Journal of Moral Philosophy, Minds & Machines, Law & Philosophy, Canadian Journal of Law & Jurisprudence, University of Toronto Law Journal, Cambridge Law Journal, Criminal Law & Philosophy, and AI & Ethics.
Re'em earned his LL.B. (summa cum laude), LL.M. (magna cum laude), and Ph.D. from the Hebrew University, and has held visiting positions at Harvard, Columbia, Berkeley, NYU, and UBC. He won various awards and grants, including the Fulbright Post-Doctoral Award, the Neil MacCormick Fellowship in Legal Theory, and several research grants from the Israel Science Foundation.
Representative Publications
Artificial Intelligence, Discrimination, Fairness, and Other Moral Concerns, Minds & Machines (forthcoming).
The Imperialism of Desert, Ergo (forthcoming) (with Ofer Malcai).
Motivating Reasons, Moral Culpability, and Criminal Law, Canadian Journal of Law & Jurisprudence (forthcoming).
A Dilemma for Luck Egalitarians, The Journal of Value Inquiry (forthcoming) (with Ofer Malcai).
The Moral Status of Input and Output Discrimination, AI & Ethics (forthcoming).
The Structure of Criminal Law, Criminal Law & Philosophy 18 (2024): 497-517.
Actions, Agents, and Consequences, Criminal Justice Ethics 42 (2023): 99-132.
General Versus Special Theories of Discrimination, Journal of Moral Philosophy 18 (2021): 265-298.
Continuity in Morality and Law, Theoretical Inquiries in Law 22 (2021): 45-85.
Moral Innocence and Criminal Law, Cambridge Law Journal 79 (2020): 549-577.
Discrimination and Law Enforcement, Routledge Handbook of the Ethics of Discrimination (2018): 324-334.
Should We Prevent Deontological Wrongdoing? Philosophical Studies 173 (2016): 2049-2068.
Moral Rightness and the Significance of Law, University of Toronto Law Journal 64 (2014): 36-63.
Justification under Uncertainty, Law & Philosophy 31 (2012): 523-563.