This article looks at the capital sentencer\u27s decision: Whether a death-eligible defendant will in fact receive the death sentence. Based in part on an examination of Jewish law and philosophy, Professor Levine identifies three particular areas in which it can be said that the Supreme Court requires the capital sentencer to play God. First, capital sentencers are asked to ascertain the degree of a defendant\u27s culpability by looking at factors that affect free will and victim impact evidence, implicating moral luck. Capital sentencers are also required to determine a person\u27s total moral worth by considering character evidence. Finally, the Supreme Court has upheld the practice of allowing capital sentencers to consider prediction...
Jurors exercise unique legal power when they are asked to decide whether to sentence someone to deat...
Our constitutional law of capital sentencing does not understand Shakespeare\u27s gentle rain from ...
Why would a God concerned about justice in a matter of life and death be willing to delegate an abso...
This article looks at the capital sentencer\u27s decision: Whether a death-eligible defendant will i...
Determining the place and use of capital punishment in the American legal system is a challenging af...
Determining the place and use of capital punishment in the American legal system is a challenging af...
In recent years, a growing body of scholarship has developed in the United States that applies conce...
In recent years, a growing body of scholarship has developed in the United States which applies conc...
Within the United States, legal challenges to the death penalty have held it to be a “cruel and unus...
The first part of this article reviews biblical texts that have been (or could plausibly be) read as...
This Essay examines America\u27s death penalty forty years after Furman and provides a critique of t...
Professors John H. Blume and Sheri Lynn Johnson explore the occurrences of religious imagery and arg...
This fall, the United States Supreme Court will consider the constitutionality of the juvenile death...
In this Essay, Professor Douglas conducts an historical review of religious attitudes toward capital...
This article explores Eighth Amendment theories that might justify the effort by the Supreme Court t...
Jurors exercise unique legal power when they are asked to decide whether to sentence someone to deat...
Our constitutional law of capital sentencing does not understand Shakespeare\u27s gentle rain from ...
Why would a God concerned about justice in a matter of life and death be willing to delegate an abso...
This article looks at the capital sentencer\u27s decision: Whether a death-eligible defendant will i...
Determining the place and use of capital punishment in the American legal system is a challenging af...
Determining the place and use of capital punishment in the American legal system is a challenging af...
In recent years, a growing body of scholarship has developed in the United States that applies conce...
In recent years, a growing body of scholarship has developed in the United States which applies conc...
Within the United States, legal challenges to the death penalty have held it to be a “cruel and unus...
The first part of this article reviews biblical texts that have been (or could plausibly be) read as...
This Essay examines America\u27s death penalty forty years after Furman and provides a critique of t...
Professors John H. Blume and Sheri Lynn Johnson explore the occurrences of religious imagery and arg...
This fall, the United States Supreme Court will consider the constitutionality of the juvenile death...
In this Essay, Professor Douglas conducts an historical review of religious attitudes toward capital...
This article explores Eighth Amendment theories that might justify the effort by the Supreme Court t...
Jurors exercise unique legal power when they are asked to decide whether to sentence someone to deat...
Our constitutional law of capital sentencing does not understand Shakespeare\u27s gentle rain from ...
Why would a God concerned about justice in a matter of life and death be willing to delegate an abso...