The Japanese government’s justification for retaining the death penalty is that abolition would erode the legitimacy of and public trust in the criminal justice system, leading to victims’ families taking justice into their own hands. This justification is based on the results of a regularly administered public opinion survey, which is said to show strong public support for the death penalty. However, a close analysis of the results of the 2014 survey fails to validate this claim. Just over a third of respondents were committed to retaining the death penalty at all costs, while the rest accepted the possibility of future abolition, with some of them seeing this as contingent on the introduction of life imprisonment without parole as an al...
Three themes have characterized death penalty abolition throughout the Western world: a sustained pe...
Death penalty or capital punishment is a legal process whereby a person is put to death by the state...
This Article was delivered by Justice Dando as the Jerome Hall Lecture at Indiana University School ...
The death penalty remains a controversial issue in Japan. While Japan has been a signatory to the In...
This paper examines public attitudes to the death penalty in Japan, and explores the validity of cla...
This paper examines the prospects for abolishing the death penalty in Japan. It outlines the trend t...
Despite the undeniable global move toward abolition or restriction of the deathpenalty, Japan has s...
What explains the difference between the United States and the many other countries that have abolis...
This Article focuses on the failure of abolition and of death penalty reform in Japan in order to il...
This paper summarises Mai Sato's recent report on public attitudes to the death penalty in Japan
The Japanese people will soon decide the fate of criminal defendants for the first time in...
Abstract The death penalty is like no other punishment. Its continued existence in many countries of...
The death penalty is like no other punishment. Its continued existence in many countries of the worl...
We argue that support for the reinstatement of capital punishment might reflect protest against an u...
This paper summarises Mai Sato's recent report on public attitudes to the death penalty in Japan
Three themes have characterized death penalty abolition throughout the Western world: a sustained pe...
Death penalty or capital punishment is a legal process whereby a person is put to death by the state...
This Article was delivered by Justice Dando as the Jerome Hall Lecture at Indiana University School ...
The death penalty remains a controversial issue in Japan. While Japan has been a signatory to the In...
This paper examines public attitudes to the death penalty in Japan, and explores the validity of cla...
This paper examines the prospects for abolishing the death penalty in Japan. It outlines the trend t...
Despite the undeniable global move toward abolition or restriction of the deathpenalty, Japan has s...
What explains the difference between the United States and the many other countries that have abolis...
This Article focuses on the failure of abolition and of death penalty reform in Japan in order to il...
This paper summarises Mai Sato's recent report on public attitudes to the death penalty in Japan
The Japanese people will soon decide the fate of criminal defendants for the first time in...
Abstract The death penalty is like no other punishment. Its continued existence in many countries of...
The death penalty is like no other punishment. Its continued existence in many countries of the worl...
We argue that support for the reinstatement of capital punishment might reflect protest against an u...
This paper summarises Mai Sato's recent report on public attitudes to the death penalty in Japan
Three themes have characterized death penalty abolition throughout the Western world: a sustained pe...
Death penalty or capital punishment is a legal process whereby a person is put to death by the state...
This Article was delivered by Justice Dando as the Jerome Hall Lecture at Indiana University School ...