Forty years and 1,400 executions after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the death penalty constitutional, eminent political scientist Frank Baumgartner and a team of younger scholars have collaborated to assess the empirical record and provide a definitive account of how the death penalty has been implemented. A Statistical Portrait of the Death Penalty shows that all the flaws that caused the Supreme Court to invalidate the death penalty in 1972 remain and indeed that new problems have arisen. Far from "perfecting the mechanism" of death, the modern system has failed.
Forty years and 1,400 executions after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the death penalty constitutional, eminent political scientist Frank Baumgartner and a team of younger scholars have collaborated to assess the empirical record and provide a definitive account of how the death penalty has been implemented. A Statistical Portrait of the Death Penalty shows that all the flaws that caused the Supreme Court to invalidate the death penalty in 1972 remain and indeed that new problems have arisen. Far from "perfecting the mechanism" of death, the modern system has failed.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
FB: Professor of Political Science, University of North Carolina; author of many books for Princeton UP and the U of Chicago Press MW: Student, UNC KJ: Student, UNC AK: Student, UNC CW: Student, UNC
Inhaltsangabe
* List of Tables * List of Figures * Preface * Acknowledgments * Chapter 1. Furman, Gregg, and the Creation of the Modern Death Penalty * Chapter 2. The Capital Punishment Process. * Chapter 3. Homicide in America * Chapter 4. Comparing Homicides with Execution Cases * Chapter 5. Which Crimes Are Capital Eligible, and is Death Reserved for the Worst Offenders? * Chapter 6. Which Jurisdictions Execute and which Ones Don't? * Chapter 7. How Often Are Death Sentences Overturned? * Chapter 8. How Long Does It Take? * Chapter 9. How Often Are People Exonerated from Death Row? * Chapter 10. How Are the Executions Carried Out? * Chapter 11. How Often Are Scheduled Executions Delayed or Cancelled? * Chapter 12. Mental Illness and Death Row * Chapter 13. How Deep Is Public Support for the Death Penalty? * Chapter 14. Why Does the Death Penalty Cost So Much? * Chapter 15. Does the Death Penalty Deter? * Chapter 16. Is the Death Penalty Dying? * Chapter 17. Does the Modern Death Penalty Meet the Goals of Furman? * Epilogue: How This Book Came About * References * Associated Web Site: * Appendices * A. State Laws Relating to Capital Crimes and Aggravating Circumstances * B. State Laws Relating to Mitigating Circumstances * C. Appendix to Chapter 12 on Mental Illness * D. Appendix to Chapter 13 on Public Opinion * E. Appendix to Chapter 14 on Cost * F. Relevant Supreme Court Cases * Data used in this book * A. The Carolina Execution Database (all executions, 1977 through 2015) * B. Homicides by County and by Year, 1984 to 2012 * C. Homicides by State and Year, 1984 to 2012 * D. Executions by County and by Year, 1975 to 2015 * E. Executions by State and by Year, 1975 to 2015 * F. Pennsylvania Death Warrants * G. Replication data for Figures used in the book * H. Web sites with data we use * a. Death Penalty Information Center * b. Clark County Prosecutor Execution database * c. National Registry of Exonerations * I. Movies / documentaries / popular culture links
* List of Tables * List of Figures * Preface * Acknowledgments * Chapter 1. Furman, Gregg, and the Creation of the Modern Death Penalty * Chapter 2. The Capital Punishment Process. * Chapter 3. Homicide in America * Chapter 4. Comparing Homicides with Execution Cases * Chapter 5. Which Crimes Are Capital Eligible, and is Death Reserved for the Worst Offenders? * Chapter 6. Which Jurisdictions Execute and which Ones Don't? * Chapter 7. How Often Are Death Sentences Overturned? * Chapter 8. How Long Does It Take? * Chapter 9. How Often Are People Exonerated from Death Row? * Chapter 10. How Are the Executions Carried Out? * Chapter 11. How Often Are Scheduled Executions Delayed or Cancelled? * Chapter 12. Mental Illness and Death Row * Chapter 13. How Deep Is Public Support for the Death Penalty? * Chapter 14. Why Does the Death Penalty Cost So Much? * Chapter 15. Does the Death Penalty Deter? * Chapter 16. Is the Death Penalty Dying? * Chapter 17. Does the Modern Death Penalty Meet the Goals of Furman? * Epilogue: How This Book Came About * References * Associated Web Site: * Appendices * A. State Laws Relating to Capital Crimes and Aggravating Circumstances * B. State Laws Relating to Mitigating Circumstances * C. Appendix to Chapter 12 on Mental Illness * D. Appendix to Chapter 13 on Public Opinion * E. Appendix to Chapter 14 on Cost * F. Relevant Supreme Court Cases * Data used in this book * A. The Carolina Execution Database (all executions, 1977 through 2015) * B. Homicides by County and by Year, 1984 to 2012 * C. Homicides by State and Year, 1984 to 2012 * D. Executions by County and by Year, 1975 to 2015 * E. Executions by State and by Year, 1975 to 2015 * F. Pennsylvania Death Warrants * G. Replication data for Figures used in the book * H. Web sites with data we use * a. Death Penalty Information Center * b. Clark County Prosecutor Execution database * c. National Registry of Exonerations * I. Movies / documentaries / popular culture links
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