The Death Penalty Information Center, sup­port­ed by the Foreign Office of the Federal Republic of Germany, launched a new project on Human Rights and the U.S. Death Penalty on November 4, 2022, with a live-streamed pan­el dis­cus­sion at the German embassy in Washington, D.C. The record­ed event, which fea­tured not­ed experts and was attend­ed by schol­ars, advo­cates, and mem­bers of the world diplo­mat­ic corps, was the first in a series of webi­na­rs that will spot­light human rights issues in the use and imple­men­ta­tion of the U.S. death penalty.

The pro­gram reframed the dis­cus­sion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment from a pub­lic safe­ty con­text to whether its exis­tence and prac­tice is incom­pat­i­ble with fun­da­men­tal notions of human rights. Legal his­to­ri­an and law pro­fes­sor John Bessler, author of numer­ous books on cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, includ­ing the soon-to-be-released The Death Penalty’s Denial of Fundamental Human Rights, addressed whether the death penal­ty, though per­mit­ted to a lim­it­ed degree in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, has become a form of pun­ish­ment that, by its very nature, is fun­da­men­tal­ly incon­sis­tent with our evolv­ing under­stand­ing of human decen­cy and human rights. 

Explaining the expand­ed under­stand­ing of tor­ture from the phys­i­cal inflic­tion of excru­ci­at­ing pain to includ­ing psy­cho­log­i­cal tor­ture and death threats, Bessler said, We need to be think­ing about re-char­ac­ter­iz­ing the death penal­ty as an act of tor­ture.” The death penal­ty, he said, is essen­tial­ly a series of death threats. … [A] cap­i­tal charg­ing deci­sion, that real­ly is just a threat of death. You think about a death sen­tence, that’s just even a more cred­i­ble threat of death. … [W]hen we think about the death penal­ty, we need to be think­ing about the use of these kinds of state sanc­tioned or state spon­sored death threats ….”

Nathalie Greenfield, a human rights lawyer and fel­low at the Cornell Center on the Death Penalty Worldwide who has rep­re­sent­ed women on death row in the United States, Tanzania, and Malawi, dis­cussed the dehu­man­iz­ing treat­ment of women fac­ing cap­i­tal sanc­tions in the United States, both in sys­temic fail­ures to pre­vent and redress gen­der vio­lence to which vir­tu­al­ly all women fac­ing the death penal­ty in the U.S. have been exposed and in the use of gen­der stereo­typed argu­ments in seek­ing the death penal­ty. Prosecutors are rou­tine­ly engag­ing in these nar­ra­tives that are real­ly root­ed in gen­der stereo­typ­ing,” Greenfield said, and women are ulti­mate­ly exe­cut­ed after tri­als that are rid­dled with this kind of information.”

Diann Rust-Tierney, the Robert F. Drinan 2021 – 2022 Visiting Professor for Human Rights at the Georgetown University Law Center’s Human Rights Institute, explored why the United States has failed to sub­ject the racial issues in the U.S. death penal­ty to the same human rights analy­sis applied to the prac­tices of oth­er coun­tries. The death penal­ty has always been a human rights vio­la­tion and it’s some­thing that our human rights allies around the world have always known,” Rust-Tierney said. “[W]hen you trace the his­to­ry of the death penal­ty and its use today, you see that it was always used pri­mar­i­ly to delin­eate the rel­a­tive worth of lives based on race and skin color.” 

Reviewing the evo­lu­tion of the death penal­ty from the slave statutes of the Civil War era to its racial­ly dis­parate appli­ca­tion today, Rust-Tierney argued, The death penal­ty is demon­stra­bly a human rights vio­la­tion…. The gore and gut-wrench­ing nature of the beast was always meant to be a fea­ture. It’s not a bug. And while the death penal­ty has been cloaked as a mea­sure of account­abil­i­ty, or response to crim­i­nal activ­i­ty and pub­lic safe­ty, it’s a prac­tice that has always been prac­ticed in a capri­cious and biased way.”

DPIC’s human rights project grew out of dis­cus­sions with staff mem­bers of the German embassy. DPIC pre­sent­ed the sec­ond event in the series, a webi­nar on Race, Human Rights, and the U.S. Death Penalty, on November 7, 2022, with two addi­tion­al webi­na­rs to follow.

Axel Dittmann, Deputy Head of Mission for the German Embassy in the U.S., opened the embassy event with his­tor­i­cal con­text. He recount­ed that Germany abol­ished the death penal­ty in its 1949 con­sti­tu­tion, explain­ing that it was the U.S. that helped Germany to build a con­sti­tu­tion” based on the prin­ci­ples of human dig­ni­ty and human rights.” Discussing a pend­ing United Nation’s res­o­lu­tion call­ing for a glob­al mora­to­ri­um on the death penal­ty, Dittmann stat­ed that Europe and Australia togeth­er hope for some kind of sup­port from the United States. By not oppos­ing the res­o­lu­tion, the Biden admin­is­tra­tion could clear­ly show its posi­tion and ambi­tion in this field. It would be anoth­er good sign for our transat­lantic com­mu­ni­ty of com­bined val­ues and sup­port for human rights.”

Speaking on behalf of the European Union, Claire Fitzgibbon, who heads the Political, Security, and Development Section of the EU Delegation to the U.S., called the abo­li­tion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment the EU’s first pri­or­i­ty in advanc­ing human rights in the United States.” The European Union, she said, will con­tin­ue to advo­cate for the abo­li­tion of the death penal­ty for as long as it takes.” 

Fitzgibbon not­ed that one of the biggest dif­fer­ences between the U.S. and the EU’s inter­pre­ta­tion of the death penal­ty is that we see it as a human rights issue, while the U.S. pri­mar­i­ly sees cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment as a crim­i­nal law issue.” The DPIC webi­nar series, she said will be real­ly impor­tant in high­light­ing how main­tain­ing the death penal­ty per­pet­u­ates a wide range of human rights abuses.”

DPIC Executive Director Robert Dunham, quar­an­tined from trav­el by COVID pre­cau­tions, pro­vid­ed pre-record­ed remarks pri­or to the pan­el dis­cus­sion. As you will hear through­out this series,” Dunham said, the mere exis­tence of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in the U.S. legit­imizes oth­er extreme prac­tices in the admin­is­tra­tion of this nation’s crim­i­nal laws and it embold­ens more repres­sive nations to engage in even graver human rights abus­es. The U.S. death penal­ty is not just a human rights issue in itself, it also impedes efforts by both the United States and by our friends and allies alike to respect human dig­ni­ty, pro­tect basic social, eco­nom­ic, and polit­i­cal rights, and pro­mote the val­ues of a free and open democratic society.”

We hope today’s ses­sion will jump­start a dis­cus­sion on these impor­tant issue,” Dunham said. 

DPIC Deputy Director Ngozi Ndulue mod­er­at­ed the embassy event. 

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To view a video of the pan­el dis­cus­sion, click here.