The state of public opinion regarding the death penalty has not experienced such flux since the late 1960s. Death sentences and executions have reached their lowest annual numbers since the early 1970s and today, the public appears fairly evenly split in its views on the death penalty. In this Essay, we explore, first, whether these changes in public opinion mean that fewer people will be qualified to serve on death penalty trials as jurors, and second, whether potential jurors are affected by changes in the practice of the death penalty. We conducted surveys of persons reporting for jury duty at the Superior Court of Orange County, California. What we found was surprising. Surveys of jurors in decades past suggested ten to twenty percent o...
Although supported in principle by two-thirds of the public and even more of the States, capital pun...
For opponents of capital punishment, these would appear promising times. Not since 1972, when the Su...
Although the support of capital punishment is on the decline, 60 percent of Americans still support ...
The state of public opinion regarding the death penalty has not experienced such flux since the late...
Forty jurisdictions sanction capital punishment. However, public opinion polls of support for the de...
Attitudes toward the death penalty are multifaceted and strongly held, but little research outside o...
Legal practices vary in states which allow the death penalty, but a jury can usually levy or recomme...
We examine support for the death penalty among a unique group of respondents: one hundred and eighty...
A recent national poll found that sixty-five percent of Americans favor the death penalty. That\u27s...
This article addresses the effect of judge versus jury decision making through analysis of a databas...
American death sentences have both declined and become concentrated in a small group of counties. In...
The death penalty is in decline in America and most death penalty states do not regularly impose dea...
A 2008 Gallup poll places public support for the death penalty at 64 percent. Stemming from an obser...
A 2011 American Bar Association report on the death penalty in Kentucky revealed that a shocking two...
Although supported in principle by two-thirds of the public and even more of the States, capital pun...
Although supported in principle by two-thirds of the public and even more of the States, capital pun...
For opponents of capital punishment, these would appear promising times. Not since 1972, when the Su...
Although the support of capital punishment is on the decline, 60 percent of Americans still support ...
The state of public opinion regarding the death penalty has not experienced such flux since the late...
Forty jurisdictions sanction capital punishment. However, public opinion polls of support for the de...
Attitudes toward the death penalty are multifaceted and strongly held, but little research outside o...
Legal practices vary in states which allow the death penalty, but a jury can usually levy or recomme...
We examine support for the death penalty among a unique group of respondents: one hundred and eighty...
A recent national poll found that sixty-five percent of Americans favor the death penalty. That\u27s...
This article addresses the effect of judge versus jury decision making through analysis of a databas...
American death sentences have both declined and become concentrated in a small group of counties. In...
The death penalty is in decline in America and most death penalty states do not regularly impose dea...
A 2008 Gallup poll places public support for the death penalty at 64 percent. Stemming from an obser...
A 2011 American Bar Association report on the death penalty in Kentucky revealed that a shocking two...
Although supported in principle by two-thirds of the public and even more of the States, capital pun...
Although supported in principle by two-thirds of the public and even more of the States, capital pun...
For opponents of capital punishment, these would appear promising times. Not since 1972, when the Su...
Although the support of capital punishment is on the decline, 60 percent of Americans still support ...