The history of capital punishment in post-Independence Ireland has received scant scholarly attention. This essay is an attempt to set out what can be learned about the executed persons, the executioners, and the politicians whose inaction (not reforming the law) and actions (deciding against clemency) brought the two former groups together. The death penalty was deployed strategically against IRA members during the early 1940s as part of a package of legal measures designed to crush subversive activity, but more usually its targets were murderers whose acts had no wider ramifications. One notable aspect of the Irish arrangements was that when a prisoner was to be taken to the gallows an English hangman was always contracted to arran...
Late nineteenth-century homicides in Ireland had several distinctive characteristics. They took plac...
Capital punishment occupies a central area of investigation within the annals of Western European pe...
The state executions of 81 IRA men during the Irish civil war have long been a bitter, almost taboo ...
The history of capital punishment in post-Independence Ireland has received scant scholarly attentio...
This article examines the relationship between politically motivated murder, martyrdom, and the dea...
The genealogy of capital punishment in twentieth-century Ireland defies easy articulation, and sever...
The genealogy of capital punishment in twentieth-century Ireland defies easy articulation, and sever...
This thesis examines the executions policy undertaken by the pro-treatyite Provisional/Free State Go...
This thesis examines the executions policy undertaken by the pro-treatyite Provisional/Free State Go...
Capital punishment for murder was abolished in Britain in 1965. At this time, the way people in Brit...
Stuart Banner’s thoughtful book, The Death Penalty: An American History (2002), serves as the basis ...
This is a book review of Ian O’Donnell, Justice, Mercy, and Caprice: Clemency and the Death Penalty ...
This is the published version, also available here: http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/744298
Capital punishment (sometimes referred to as the death penalty) is the carrying out of a legal sente...
Executioners and others who come into close proximity with the condemned often come to reject the de...
Late nineteenth-century homicides in Ireland had several distinctive characteristics. They took plac...
Capital punishment occupies a central area of investigation within the annals of Western European pe...
The state executions of 81 IRA men during the Irish civil war have long been a bitter, almost taboo ...
The history of capital punishment in post-Independence Ireland has received scant scholarly attentio...
This article examines the relationship between politically motivated murder, martyrdom, and the dea...
The genealogy of capital punishment in twentieth-century Ireland defies easy articulation, and sever...
The genealogy of capital punishment in twentieth-century Ireland defies easy articulation, and sever...
This thesis examines the executions policy undertaken by the pro-treatyite Provisional/Free State Go...
This thesis examines the executions policy undertaken by the pro-treatyite Provisional/Free State Go...
Capital punishment for murder was abolished in Britain in 1965. At this time, the way people in Brit...
Stuart Banner’s thoughtful book, The Death Penalty: An American History (2002), serves as the basis ...
This is a book review of Ian O’Donnell, Justice, Mercy, and Caprice: Clemency and the Death Penalty ...
This is the published version, also available here: http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/744298
Capital punishment (sometimes referred to as the death penalty) is the carrying out of a legal sente...
Executioners and others who come into close proximity with the condemned often come to reject the de...
Late nineteenth-century homicides in Ireland had several distinctive characteristics. They took plac...
Capital punishment occupies a central area of investigation within the annals of Western European pe...
The state executions of 81 IRA men during the Irish civil war have long been a bitter, almost taboo ...