The paper explores continuities and discontinuities between two kinds of death in punishment; of death as punishment and of death as the specified detritus of punishment (LWOP). It traces the parallel lives and equivalencies between life and death in penal policy and practice in the US, and attendant narratives of harshness/mildness, and compromises and covenants with pasts and futures. The discourse of death that has sustained the survival of the death penalty in the US has found a home in LWOP. It argues that spectacles and memorialisations of injustice, error and pain circumscribed in the judicial and popular discourse of death as different provide spaces for reflection on dignity and cruelty, spaces in which the loss of life and liberty...
The Supreme Court’s jurisprudence regarding the death penalty, whether or not cruel, has most certai...
The authors criticize the tone and substance of the current death penalty debate. The authors demons...
A recent national poll found that sixty-five percent of Americans favor the death penalty. That\u27s...
Since its introduction in 1978 as an alternative to the death penalty, there has been a dramatic inc...
On the basis of fifty-four elite interviews[1] with legislators, judges, attorneys, and civil societ...
Today, death penalty opponents mostly claim life without parole (LWOP) as their genuinely popular su...
Today’s topic is the death penalty. I will discuss multiple areas related to the death penalty, incl...
The problem I will explore in my paper is the death penalty’s role in the criminal justice system an...
In this paper, the author takes a closer look at retribution, which is the primary justification for...
Since the nineteenth century, executions have been transformed from public events to ‘behind-the-sce...
This special collection of articles on the death penalty and the politics of abolition in Asia and t...
This project will examine the evolution of the death penalty throughout history and discuss the lega...
This paper investigates the conditional demands of Death-Is-Different jurisprudence in the United St...
Measured in executions, the death penalty in the USA is declining. Yet, under that shadow, death sen...
Today, despite daily struggles in courtrooms against capital punishment, there appears little legal ...
The Supreme Court’s jurisprudence regarding the death penalty, whether or not cruel, has most certai...
The authors criticize the tone and substance of the current death penalty debate. The authors demons...
A recent national poll found that sixty-five percent of Americans favor the death penalty. That\u27s...
Since its introduction in 1978 as an alternative to the death penalty, there has been a dramatic inc...
On the basis of fifty-four elite interviews[1] with legislators, judges, attorneys, and civil societ...
Today, death penalty opponents mostly claim life without parole (LWOP) as their genuinely popular su...
Today’s topic is the death penalty. I will discuss multiple areas related to the death penalty, incl...
The problem I will explore in my paper is the death penalty’s role in the criminal justice system an...
In this paper, the author takes a closer look at retribution, which is the primary justification for...
Since the nineteenth century, executions have been transformed from public events to ‘behind-the-sce...
This special collection of articles on the death penalty and the politics of abolition in Asia and t...
This project will examine the evolution of the death penalty throughout history and discuss the lega...
This paper investigates the conditional demands of Death-Is-Different jurisprudence in the United St...
Measured in executions, the death penalty in the USA is declining. Yet, under that shadow, death sen...
Today, despite daily struggles in courtrooms against capital punishment, there appears little legal ...
The Supreme Court’s jurisprudence regarding the death penalty, whether or not cruel, has most certai...
The authors criticize the tone and substance of the current death penalty debate. The authors demons...
A recent national poll found that sixty-five percent of Americans favor the death penalty. That\u27s...