Closure, though a term with great rhetorical force in the capital punishment context, has to date evaded systematic analysis, instead becoming embroiled in ideological controversy. For victims who have rubbed the rights lamp for years, inclusion in capital proceedings and accompanying closure opportunities are perceived as a force with the potential to grant wishes of peace and finality. Scholars, however, argue for rebottling the closure genie lest closure itself prove false or its pursuit violate a defendant\u27s constitutional rights. In order to effectively appraise the relationship of closure to criminal jurisprudence, however, and thus to decide whether and to what extent closure is an appropriate adjudicative goal, it is necessary to...
On October 10, 2014, the Oklahoma State Penitentiary opened its doors to the media to reveal a new s...
A central precept of death penalty jurisprudence is that only the death worthy should be condemned...
Although the support of capital punishment is on the decline, 60 percent of Americans still support ...
Closure, though a term with great rhetorical force in the capital punishment context, has to date ev...
textSeveral justifications exist for the death penalty, yet it is only recently that the concept of ...
The concept of closure, almost unknown two decades ago, has had a meteoric rise. It has been enthusi...
On April 19, 1995, Timothy McVeigh detonated a two-ton truck bomb that felled the Alfred P. Murrah F...
Bandes discusses the polarizing function of victim impact statements used in the context of the deat...
While rehabilitation is reemerging as an important penological goal, the Supreme Court is eroding th...
Contemporary death penalty law is deeply conflicted. The basic procedural and jurisprudential struct...
This article appears in the Hofstra Law Review symposium issue on the Supplementary Guidelines for t...
This volume presents perspectives of murder victims\u27 family members, academics, and crime victims...
While scholars seem united on the sentiment that abolition is the ultimate resting place for capital...
Moral disengagement refers to how individuals rationalize the decisions they make, especially if the...
The revised edition of the ABA\u27s Guidelines for the Appointment and Performance of Defense Couns...
On October 10, 2014, the Oklahoma State Penitentiary opened its doors to the media to reveal a new s...
A central precept of death penalty jurisprudence is that only the death worthy should be condemned...
Although the support of capital punishment is on the decline, 60 percent of Americans still support ...
Closure, though a term with great rhetorical force in the capital punishment context, has to date ev...
textSeveral justifications exist for the death penalty, yet it is only recently that the concept of ...
The concept of closure, almost unknown two decades ago, has had a meteoric rise. It has been enthusi...
On April 19, 1995, Timothy McVeigh detonated a two-ton truck bomb that felled the Alfred P. Murrah F...
Bandes discusses the polarizing function of victim impact statements used in the context of the deat...
While rehabilitation is reemerging as an important penological goal, the Supreme Court is eroding th...
Contemporary death penalty law is deeply conflicted. The basic procedural and jurisprudential struct...
This article appears in the Hofstra Law Review symposium issue on the Supplementary Guidelines for t...
This volume presents perspectives of murder victims\u27 family members, academics, and crime victims...
While scholars seem united on the sentiment that abolition is the ultimate resting place for capital...
Moral disengagement refers to how individuals rationalize the decisions they make, especially if the...
The revised edition of the ABA\u27s Guidelines for the Appointment and Performance of Defense Couns...
On October 10, 2014, the Oklahoma State Penitentiary opened its doors to the media to reveal a new s...
A central precept of death penalty jurisprudence is that only the death worthy should be condemned...
Although the support of capital punishment is on the decline, 60 percent of Americans still support ...