The March 2008 issue of the Pierce Law Review explores many aspects of the death penalty through articles written by renowned death penalty scholars and attorneys. With a forward by Christopher M. Johnson, the Review examines the death penalty at individual, societal, and international levels. To coincide with the publication of this issue, the Franklin Pierce Law Center in New Hampshire held a panel discussion on the death penalty on April 15, 2008.

The articles included in this special death penalty issue of the Pierce Law Review are:

  • THE DEATH PENALTY AND THE SOCIETY WE WANT by Stephen B. Bright
  • THE EMERGING DEATH PENALTY JURISPRUDENCE OF THE ROBERTS COURT by Kenneth C. Haas
  • THE ABOLITIONIST’S DILEMMA: ESTABLISHING THE STANDARDS FOR THE EVOLVING STANDARDS OF DECENCY by Dwight Aarons
  • COMPLETELY UNGUIDED DISCRETION: ADMITTING NON-STATUTORY AGGRAVATING AND NON-STATUTORY MITIGATING EVIDENCE IN CAPITAL SENTENCING TRIALS by Sharon Turlington
  • DEATH IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL: HOW CAPITAL PUNISHMENT BECAME ILLEGAL IN AMERICA — A FUTURE HISTORY by Dr. Jur. Eric Engle
  • THE DEATH PENALTY AND REVERSIBLE ERROR IN MASSACHUSETTS by Alan Rogers
  • ESCAPE FROM DEATH ROW: A STUDY OF “TRIPPING” AS AN INDIVIDUAL ADJUSTMENT STRATEGY AMONG DEATH ROW PRISONERS by Sandra McGunigall-Smith & Robert Johnson
  • WILL THE UNITED STATES FOLLOW ENGLAND (AND THE REST OF THE WORLD) IN ABANDONING CAPITAL PUNISHMENT? by Frederick C. Millett.


(6 Pierce Law Review 365, March 2008). See Law Reviews.

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