Capital Punishment: Theory and Practice of the Ultimate Penalty is a fair, balanced, and accessible introduction to the greatest moral issue facing the American criminal justice system today. Opening with a unique chapter that outlines the philosophical and theoretical explanations for punishment and its relevance to the death-penalty debate, the authors then explore the wide array of topics in the field. The text covers the history of the death penalty in the U.S. from colonial times to the present day; the relevant landmark U.S. Supreme Court cases from Furman v. Georgia (1972) onwards; the history of public opinion and how it shapes the debate on capital punishment; the history of U.S. execution methods; deterrence; racial disparity in the application of the death penalty; wrongful convictions; the costs associated with capital punishment; and federal, military, and international death penalties. FEATURES Incorporates "Perspectives from the Field" boxes in most chapters that add valuable insights from people who have been personally involved in capital cases, including a judge, a prosecutor, a neuroscientist, a former death-row resident, and other key practitioners in the field Explores the process by which "hard" science (DNA) is used to address exoneration and mitigation, in terms that are understandable to students Includes an in-depth discussion of why we punish wrongdoers, examining why our urge to punish is so strong An open-access Companion Website provides chapter outlines, chapter learning objectives, sample quiz/exam questions, and links to helpful websites
Garza commissioned some of his workers to murder De La Fuente, but they were unable to do so because a small entourage that included Gilberto Matos, an associate of De La Fuente and drug smuggler who worked with Garza, ...
Five short novels about the death penalty: includes Last Day of a Condemned Man by Victor Hugo; Lois the Witch by Elizabeth Gaskell; The Dead Alive by Wilkie Collins; Billy Budd by Herman Melville and The Seven Who Were Hanged by Leonid ...
Presents an overview of the history of capital punishment, theories on the causes of crime and the deterrent effects of punitive actions, and the moral and legal principles involved.
5 The Electric Chair : Bob Sullivan I note that both the American Veterinary Medical Association and the Humane Society of the United States prohibit electrocution as a means to euthanize animals . —Georgia Supreme Court Justice Leah ...
PMID: 4668419 Haines, Herbert H. Against capital punishment: the anti-death penalty movement in America, 1972-1994 / Herbert H. Haines. Published/Created: New York: Oxford University Press, 1999. Projected Pub.
How can one man take such a dual role of friend and executioner, becoming both shepherd and butcher? Inspired by true events, this is the story that puts the death penalty on trial and changes history.
Or is it, in the words of the Furman majority more than thirty years ago, still applied in a manner so arbitrary as to be freakish? In his concurring opinion in Furman, Justice William Brennan pointed out the obvious: the United States ...
An Eye for an Eye?: The Morality of Punishing by Death
In addition, the report noted Boylan's respectable working-class background.24 More importantly, given the conventional approach to cases theretofore, Mr Justice O'Byrne recommended a reprieve. Describing Boylan as 'an irascible ...
103 Those men are: Ronald Gray, Dwight Loving, Todd Dock, Melvin Turner, James Murphy, Ronnie Curtis, Joseph Thomas, Curtis Gibb, Jose Simoy, Kenneth Parker, Wade Walker, William Kreutzer, Jesse Quintanilla, Andrew Witt, Hassan Akbar, ...