In this Article, the author applies the basic principles of Kantian retributive justice to the eighth amendment issue posed by the use of the death penalty against juveniles. The author contends that the debate over the retributive value of the juvenile death penalty has mistakenly focused solely on whether such a punishment is cardinally proportional to the culpability of the juvenile offender. The author argues that retributive justice also imposes an important, theoretically related requirement that punishments satisfy ordinal proportionality. According to the author, a bright line prohibition of the juvenile death penalty, based on chronological age, would violate ordinal proportionality. The author concludes that the Supreme Court, i...
Steiker and Steiker discuss the ABA\u27s resolutions regarding the execution of juveniles and person...
This Article first briefly examines the United States Supreme Court cases dealing with the juvenile ...
This Essay examines America\u27s death penalty forty years after Furman and provides a critique of t...
In this Article, the author applies the basic principles of Kantian retributive justice to the eight...
The Eighth Amendment provides that “no cruel and unusual punishment shall be inflicted.” The Supreme...
This article begins with a discussion of the Supreme Court’s decision to abolish the death penalty a...
This article argues that the chaos of the US Supreme Court’s death penalty jurisprudence can be sort...
The Supreme Court in Roper v. Simmons 1 interpreted the Eighth Amendment to prohibit states from exe...
If the death penalty becomes an option for children under sixteen, the unavoidable conclusion must b...
Streib offers a sketch of the sentences and actual executions in the juvenile death penalty system f...
This Article addresses how Lockett v. Ohio and the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence on mitigating facto...
It is inherently cruel and unjust to give a minor a death penalty. There are many issues with the U...
There is a great struggle in the United States between proponents of the death penalty and death pen...
The practice of imposing the death penalty for crimes committed while under the age of eighteen has ...
The Supreme Court in Roper v. Simmons 1 prohibited states from executing offenders for murders commi...
Steiker and Steiker discuss the ABA\u27s resolutions regarding the execution of juveniles and person...
This Article first briefly examines the United States Supreme Court cases dealing with the juvenile ...
This Essay examines America\u27s death penalty forty years after Furman and provides a critique of t...
In this Article, the author applies the basic principles of Kantian retributive justice to the eight...
The Eighth Amendment provides that “no cruel and unusual punishment shall be inflicted.” The Supreme...
This article begins with a discussion of the Supreme Court’s decision to abolish the death penalty a...
This article argues that the chaos of the US Supreme Court’s death penalty jurisprudence can be sort...
The Supreme Court in Roper v. Simmons 1 interpreted the Eighth Amendment to prohibit states from exe...
If the death penalty becomes an option for children under sixteen, the unavoidable conclusion must b...
Streib offers a sketch of the sentences and actual executions in the juvenile death penalty system f...
This Article addresses how Lockett v. Ohio and the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence on mitigating facto...
It is inherently cruel and unjust to give a minor a death penalty. There are many issues with the U...
There is a great struggle in the United States between proponents of the death penalty and death pen...
The practice of imposing the death penalty for crimes committed while under the age of eighteen has ...
The Supreme Court in Roper v. Simmons 1 prohibited states from executing offenders for murders commi...
Steiker and Steiker discuss the ABA\u27s resolutions regarding the execution of juveniles and person...
This Article first briefly examines the United States Supreme Court cases dealing with the juvenile ...
This Essay examines America\u27s death penalty forty years after Furman and provides a critique of t...