Pope Francis, Capital Punishment, and Law A Conversation with Professor John Finnis and Professor Gerard Bradley Monday, October 29 12:30 pm • Eck Hall of Law Room 1130 Complimentary Lunch • Free and Open to the Public Pope Francis recently announced an updating of part of the Catechism of the Catholic Church pertaining to the legitimacy of the death penalty. Notre Dame Law School Professors John Finnis and Gerard V. Bradley will discuss the content of this update, analyze how it fits into the Church’s tradition of teaching on the death penalty, imagine what future developments are left to be made, and address the question: Why does any of this matter for law students and practicing lawyers in the United States? What influence should Cathol...
Prior to the 20th century, Roman Catholic moral tradition was almost exclusively supportive of capit...
Determining the place and use of capital punishment in the American legal system is a challenging af...
The death penalty is contested across modern social, political, academic, and legal institutions, an...
Pope Francis, Capital Punishment, and Law A Conversation with Professor John Finnis and Professor Ge...
Pope Francis, Capital Punishment, and Law A Conversation with Professor John Finnis and Professor Ge...
In the United States, Catholics make up more than 50 million members of the adult population, or abo...
In a significant change to Catholic Church doctrine, Pope Francis recently declared that capital pun...
Despite obvious differences, certain historical and conceptual underpinnings of Catholic death penal...
The last fifty years have seen a turn in the Catholic Church's public attitude toward capital punish...
On the evening of October 14, 2021, the Catholic Law community gathered in Walter A. Slowinski Court...
Part I of this Article describe s Pope John Paul II’s teaching on capital punishment as based on the...
In 2018, Pope Francis updated the Catechism of the Catholic Church to say that the death penalty is ...
The Catholic Church\u27s opposition to the death penalty places Catholic judges in a moral and legal...
The article compares the U.S. Jurisprudence with the death penalty teaching of the Catholic Church t...
Catholic Nations are the most likely to advocate for the abolishment the death penalty. Observed: Ca...
Prior to the 20th century, Roman Catholic moral tradition was almost exclusively supportive of capit...
Determining the place and use of capital punishment in the American legal system is a challenging af...
The death penalty is contested across modern social, political, academic, and legal institutions, an...
Pope Francis, Capital Punishment, and Law A Conversation with Professor John Finnis and Professor Ge...
Pope Francis, Capital Punishment, and Law A Conversation with Professor John Finnis and Professor Ge...
In the United States, Catholics make up more than 50 million members of the adult population, or abo...
In a significant change to Catholic Church doctrine, Pope Francis recently declared that capital pun...
Despite obvious differences, certain historical and conceptual underpinnings of Catholic death penal...
The last fifty years have seen a turn in the Catholic Church's public attitude toward capital punish...
On the evening of October 14, 2021, the Catholic Law community gathered in Walter A. Slowinski Court...
Part I of this Article describe s Pope John Paul II’s teaching on capital punishment as based on the...
In 2018, Pope Francis updated the Catechism of the Catholic Church to say that the death penalty is ...
The Catholic Church\u27s opposition to the death penalty places Catholic judges in a moral and legal...
The article compares the U.S. Jurisprudence with the death penalty teaching of the Catholic Church t...
Catholic Nations are the most likely to advocate for the abolishment the death penalty. Observed: Ca...
Prior to the 20th century, Roman Catholic moral tradition was almost exclusively supportive of capit...
Determining the place and use of capital punishment in the American legal system is a challenging af...
The death penalty is contested across modern social, political, academic, and legal institutions, an...