This paper investigates the conditional demands of Death-Is-Different jurisprudence in the United States criminal justice system and argues that the dissonance between the need for heightened protections in capital sentencing and the reality of our capital-sentencing institutions ultimately renders the death penalty, as it currently exists in our society, impermissible. This claim is substantiated in three parts: first, through an analysis of foundational death penalty decisions from the Supreme Course, which condemn the arbitrary nature of capital juries while simultaneously justifying their constitutional necessity as sentencing agents; second, through an examination of the development of Death-Is-Different jurisprudence and its conceptua...
Capital punishment has generated an incredible amount of public debate. Is the practice constitution...
In recent Eight Amendment decisions applying the Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause to substantive ...
A common objection to the death penalty is that it is “arbitrarily” imposed. Indeed, the Supreme Cou...
This paper investigates the conditional demands of Death-Is-Different jurisprudence in the United St...
Within the United States, legal challenges to the death penalty have held it to be a “cruel and unus...
As the Supreme Court has said, time and again, death is different: It is different in kind from any...
Over twenty years ago, the United States Supreme Court held that both mandatory capital sentencing s...
The Supreme Court takes two very different approaches to substantive sentencing law. Whereas its rev...
In a volume devoted to comparing adversarial and inquisitorial procedures in Western countries, the ...
This paper seeks to explore the philosophical influences that shaped American political thought su...
In 1972, in Furman v. Georgia, the Supreme Court deemed it incontestable that a death sentence is ...
The death penalty is in decline in America and most death penalty states do not regularly impose dea...
The central tenet of the economic approach to criminal law is deterrence. This approach provides a u...
In 1972, in Furman v. Georgia, the Supreme Court deemed it “incon-testable” that a death sentence is...
We examine support for the death penalty among a unique group of respondents: one hundred and eighty...
Capital punishment has generated an incredible amount of public debate. Is the practice constitution...
In recent Eight Amendment decisions applying the Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause to substantive ...
A common objection to the death penalty is that it is “arbitrarily” imposed. Indeed, the Supreme Cou...
This paper investigates the conditional demands of Death-Is-Different jurisprudence in the United St...
Within the United States, legal challenges to the death penalty have held it to be a “cruel and unus...
As the Supreme Court has said, time and again, death is different: It is different in kind from any...
Over twenty years ago, the United States Supreme Court held that both mandatory capital sentencing s...
The Supreme Court takes two very different approaches to substantive sentencing law. Whereas its rev...
In a volume devoted to comparing adversarial and inquisitorial procedures in Western countries, the ...
This paper seeks to explore the philosophical influences that shaped American political thought su...
In 1972, in Furman v. Georgia, the Supreme Court deemed it incontestable that a death sentence is ...
The death penalty is in decline in America and most death penalty states do not regularly impose dea...
The central tenet of the economic approach to criminal law is deterrence. This approach provides a u...
In 1972, in Furman v. Georgia, the Supreme Court deemed it “incon-testable” that a death sentence is...
We examine support for the death penalty among a unique group of respondents: one hundred and eighty...
Capital punishment has generated an incredible amount of public debate. Is the practice constitution...
In recent Eight Amendment decisions applying the Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause to substantive ...
A common objection to the death penalty is that it is “arbitrarily” imposed. Indeed, the Supreme Cou...