Jurors exercise unique legal power when they are asked to decide whether to sentence someone to death. The Supreme Court emphasizes the central role of the jury’s moral judgment in making this sentencing decision, noting that it is the jurors who are best able to “express the conscience of the community on the ultimate question of life or death.” Manylower courts nevertheless narrow the range of admissible evidence at the mitigation phase of a capital trial, insisting on a standard of legal relevance that interferes with the jury’s ability to exercise the very moral judgment the Supreme Court has deemed essential. Combining moral theory and original empirical evidence, this Article breaks new ground by linking these to a legal framework tha...
The capital trial, by its nature, is fraught with emotionally disturbing elements that jurors must f...
This fall, the United States Supreme Court will consider the constitutionality of the juvenile death...
This Article addresses whether the U.S. Constitution requires courts to permit capital defendants to...
Jurors exercise unique legal power when they are asked to decide whether to sentence someone to deat...
The Capital Jury Project in South Carolina interviewed jurors who sat in forty-one capital murder ca...
A central precept of death penalty jurisprudence is that only the death worthy should be condemned...
A central precept of death penalty jurisprudence is that only the death worthy should be condemned...
Forty jurisdictions sanction capital punishment. However, public opinion polls of support for the de...
Forty jurisdictions sanction capital punishment. However, public opinion polls of support for the de...
Forty jurisdictions sanction capital punishment. However, public opinion polls of support for the de...
This fall, the United States Supreme Court will consider the constitutionality of the juvenile death...
Attitudes toward the death penalty are multifaceted and strongly held, but little research outside o...
This dissertation examines the importance of instruction comprehension injury decisionmaking at the ...
This dissertation examines the importance of instruction comprehension injury decisionmaking at the ...
This dissertation examines the importance of instruction comprehension injury decisionmaking at the ...
The capital trial, by its nature, is fraught with emotionally disturbing elements that jurors must f...
This fall, the United States Supreme Court will consider the constitutionality of the juvenile death...
This Article addresses whether the U.S. Constitution requires courts to permit capital defendants to...
Jurors exercise unique legal power when they are asked to decide whether to sentence someone to deat...
The Capital Jury Project in South Carolina interviewed jurors who sat in forty-one capital murder ca...
A central precept of death penalty jurisprudence is that only the death worthy should be condemned...
A central precept of death penalty jurisprudence is that only the death worthy should be condemned...
Forty jurisdictions sanction capital punishment. However, public opinion polls of support for the de...
Forty jurisdictions sanction capital punishment. However, public opinion polls of support for the de...
Forty jurisdictions sanction capital punishment. However, public opinion polls of support for the de...
This fall, the United States Supreme Court will consider the constitutionality of the juvenile death...
Attitudes toward the death penalty are multifaceted and strongly held, but little research outside o...
This dissertation examines the importance of instruction comprehension injury decisionmaking at the ...
This dissertation examines the importance of instruction comprehension injury decisionmaking at the ...
This dissertation examines the importance of instruction comprehension injury decisionmaking at the ...
The capital trial, by its nature, is fraught with emotionally disturbing elements that jurors must f...
This fall, the United States Supreme Court will consider the constitutionality of the juvenile death...
This Article addresses whether the U.S. Constitution requires courts to permit capital defendants to...