Is the Death Penalty Dying?
European and American Perspectives
Herausgeber: Martschukat, Jurgen; Sarat, Austin
Is the Death Penalty Dying?
European and American Perspectives
Herausgeber: Martschukat, Jurgen; Sarat, Austin
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Examining the historical and political conditions that shaped death penalty practice from the end of World War II to today.
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Examining the historical and political conditions that shaped death penalty practice from the end of World War II to today.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 342
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Januar 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 647g
- ISBN-13: 9780521763516
- ISBN-10: 0521763517
- Artikelnr.: 32301754
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 342
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Januar 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 647g
- ISBN-13: 9780521763516
- ISBN-10: 0521763517
- Artikelnr.: 32301754
Introduction: transatlantic perspectives on capital punishment: national
identity, the death penalty, and the prospects for abolition Austin Sarat
and Jürgen Martschukat; Part I. What Is a Penalty of Death: Capital
Punishment in Context: 1. The green, green grass of home: capital
punishment and the penal system from a long-term perspective Pieter
Spierenburg; 2. Did anyone die here? Legal personalities, the supermax and
the politics of abolition Colin Dayan; 3. Capital punishment as homeowners
insurance: the rise of the homeowner citizen and the fate of ultimate
sanctions in both Europe and the United States Jonathan Simon; Part II. On
the Meaning of Death and Pain in Europe and the United States: Viewing,
Witnessing, Understanding: 4. The witnessing of judgment: between error,
mercy, and vindictiveness Evi Girling; 5. Unframing the death penalty:
transatlantic discourse on the possibility of abolition and the execution
of Saddam Hussein Kathryn A. Heard; 6. Executions and the debate about
abolition in France and in the US Simon Grivet; Part III. Abolitionist
Discourses/Abolitionist Strategies/Abolitionist Dilemmas: Transatlantic
Perspectives: 7. Civilized rebels: death penalty abolition in Europe as
cause, mark of distinction, and political strategy Andrew Hammel; 8. The
death of dignity Timothy Kaufman-Osborn; 9. Sovereignty and the unnecessary
penalty of death: European and United States perspectives Jon Yorke; 10.
European policy on the death penalty Agata Fijalkowski; 11. In the shadow
of death: capital punishment, mass incarceration, and penal policy in the
United States Marie Gottschalk.
identity, the death penalty, and the prospects for abolition Austin Sarat
and Jürgen Martschukat; Part I. What Is a Penalty of Death: Capital
Punishment in Context: 1. The green, green grass of home: capital
punishment and the penal system from a long-term perspective Pieter
Spierenburg; 2. Did anyone die here? Legal personalities, the supermax and
the politics of abolition Colin Dayan; 3. Capital punishment as homeowners
insurance: the rise of the homeowner citizen and the fate of ultimate
sanctions in both Europe and the United States Jonathan Simon; Part II. On
the Meaning of Death and Pain in Europe and the United States: Viewing,
Witnessing, Understanding: 4. The witnessing of judgment: between error,
mercy, and vindictiveness Evi Girling; 5. Unframing the death penalty:
transatlantic discourse on the possibility of abolition and the execution
of Saddam Hussein Kathryn A. Heard; 6. Executions and the debate about
abolition in France and in the US Simon Grivet; Part III. Abolitionist
Discourses/Abolitionist Strategies/Abolitionist Dilemmas: Transatlantic
Perspectives: 7. Civilized rebels: death penalty abolition in Europe as
cause, mark of distinction, and political strategy Andrew Hammel; 8. The
death of dignity Timothy Kaufman-Osborn; 9. Sovereignty and the unnecessary
penalty of death: European and United States perspectives Jon Yorke; 10.
European policy on the death penalty Agata Fijalkowski; 11. In the shadow
of death: capital punishment, mass incarceration, and penal policy in the
United States Marie Gottschalk.
Introduction: transatlantic perspectives on capital punishment: national
identity, the death penalty, and the prospects for abolition Austin Sarat
and Jürgen Martschukat; Part I. What Is a Penalty of Death: Capital
Punishment in Context: 1. The green, green grass of home: capital
punishment and the penal system from a long-term perspective Pieter
Spierenburg; 2. Did anyone die here? Legal personalities, the supermax and
the politics of abolition Colin Dayan; 3. Capital punishment as homeowners
insurance: the rise of the homeowner citizen and the fate of ultimate
sanctions in both Europe and the United States Jonathan Simon; Part II. On
the Meaning of Death and Pain in Europe and the United States: Viewing,
Witnessing, Understanding: 4. The witnessing of judgment: between error,
mercy, and vindictiveness Evi Girling; 5. Unframing the death penalty:
transatlantic discourse on the possibility of abolition and the execution
of Saddam Hussein Kathryn A. Heard; 6. Executions and the debate about
abolition in France and in the US Simon Grivet; Part III. Abolitionist
Discourses/Abolitionist Strategies/Abolitionist Dilemmas: Transatlantic
Perspectives: 7. Civilized rebels: death penalty abolition in Europe as
cause, mark of distinction, and political strategy Andrew Hammel; 8. The
death of dignity Timothy Kaufman-Osborn; 9. Sovereignty and the unnecessary
penalty of death: European and United States perspectives Jon Yorke; 10.
European policy on the death penalty Agata Fijalkowski; 11. In the shadow
of death: capital punishment, mass incarceration, and penal policy in the
United States Marie Gottschalk.
identity, the death penalty, and the prospects for abolition Austin Sarat
and Jürgen Martschukat; Part I. What Is a Penalty of Death: Capital
Punishment in Context: 1. The green, green grass of home: capital
punishment and the penal system from a long-term perspective Pieter
Spierenburg; 2. Did anyone die here? Legal personalities, the supermax and
the politics of abolition Colin Dayan; 3. Capital punishment as homeowners
insurance: the rise of the homeowner citizen and the fate of ultimate
sanctions in both Europe and the United States Jonathan Simon; Part II. On
the Meaning of Death and Pain in Europe and the United States: Viewing,
Witnessing, Understanding: 4. The witnessing of judgment: between error,
mercy, and vindictiveness Evi Girling; 5. Unframing the death penalty:
transatlantic discourse on the possibility of abolition and the execution
of Saddam Hussein Kathryn A. Heard; 6. Executions and the debate about
abolition in France and in the US Simon Grivet; Part III. Abolitionist
Discourses/Abolitionist Strategies/Abolitionist Dilemmas: Transatlantic
Perspectives: 7. Civilized rebels: death penalty abolition in Europe as
cause, mark of distinction, and political strategy Andrew Hammel; 8. The
death of dignity Timothy Kaufman-Osborn; 9. Sovereignty and the unnecessary
penalty of death: European and United States perspectives Jon Yorke; 10.
European policy on the death penalty Agata Fijalkowski; 11. In the shadow
of death: capital punishment, mass incarceration, and penal policy in the
United States Marie Gottschalk.