Policy

Deterrence

Studies find no meaningful evidence that use of the death penalty deters crime.

DPI Podcast: Discussions With DPIC

DPI Podcast: Discussions With DPIC

Does Capital Punishment Deter Murder? Exploring mur­der rates, killings of police offi­cers, and the death penalty

DPI Page: Murder Rates

DPI Page: Murder Rates

View DPI's information about state-by-state murder rates. State and regional murder statistics show no correlation between use of the death penalty and reduced crime.

Overview

Deterrence is prob­a­bly the most com­mon­ly expressed ratio­nale for the death penal­ty. The essence of the the­o­ry is that the threat of being exe­cut­ed in the future will be suf­fi­cient to cause a sig­nif­i­cant num­ber of peo­ple to refrain from com­mit­ting a heinous crime they had oth­er­wise planned. Deterrence is not prin­ci­pal­ly con­cerned with the pre­ven­tion of fur­ther killing by an already con­vict­ed death-penal­ty defen­dant. That falls under the top­ic of incapacitation.

Deterrence should not be con­sid­ered in a vac­u­um. The crit­i­cal ques­tion is not whether poten­tial crim­i­nals will be dis­suad­ed from killing because they would face the death penal­ty rather than no pun­ish­ment at all. Other pun­ish­ments such as life with­out parole might pro­vide equal deter­rence at far less costs and with­out the atten­dant risk of exe­cut­ing an inno­cent per­son. Whether the death penal­ty is a proven method of low­er­ing the mur­der rate has been sub­ject­ed to many stud­ies over many decades.

It is not enough to com­pare juris­dic­tions with the death penal­ty to those with­out unless the study con­trols for the many oth­er vari­ables that could affect the mur­der rate. For exam­ple, low­er unem­ploy­ment rates cor­re­late with low­er crime rates. More police involve­ment in the local com­mu­ni­ty seems to reduce crime. The death penal­ty affects only a tiny per­cent­age of even those who com­mit mur­der. Its effect is very dif­fi­cult to pin­point, and the National Academy of Sciences has con­clud­ed that past stud­ies have nei­ther proven nor dis­proven a deterrent effect.

At Issue

If the death penal­ty is not a proven deter­rent to mur­der, is it worth the exces­sive costs, risks of error, uncer­tain­ty of com­ple­tion, and oth­er prob­lems that are inher­ent to its prac­tice? On the polit­i­cal lev­el, the deter­rent val­ue of the death penal­ty is often tak­en for grant­ed with­out a care­ful exam­i­na­tion of the research or a con­sid­er­a­tion of less risky alter­na­tives. This is espe­cial­ly rel­e­vant giv­en that death penal­ty use has been declin­ing dra­mat­i­cal­ly. Most states are not car­ry­ing out any exe­cu­tions in a given year.

What DPI Offers

DPI has col­lect­ed many of the deter­rent stud­ies that have been con­duct­ed in the mod­ern era and has sum­ma­rized their results. It also pro­vides some of the raw data on which such stud­ies rely, such as the mur­der rate for each state in each year in the mod­ern era, along with the num­ber of exe­cu­tions and death sen­tences for each state in the same periods.

News & Developments


News

Oct 30, 2025

Low Death Sentencing, Lack of Deterrence, and High Costs Raise Questions Over Capital Punishment in Indiana

Indiana’s seem­ing­ly para­dox­i­cal resump­tion of exe­cu­tions, with three over the last year, is draw­ing scruti­ny from many cor­ners of the state. Governor Mike Braun, leg­is­la­tors from both polit­i­cal par­ties, pub­lic defend­ers and even pros­e­cu­tors have raised ques­tions about the costs of pros­e­cut­ing cap­i­tal cas­es and obtain­ing drugs for exe­cu­tions; the fail­ure of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment to deter crime; and the increas­ing reluc­tance of Indiana juries to sentence…

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News

Sep 12, 2025

30 Years Ago, South Africa Abolished the Death Penalty to Prioritize Life and Dignity

30 years ago, the new­ly formed Constitutional Court of South Africa issued a land­mark deci­sion abol­ish­ing the death penal­ty and pri­or­i­tiz­ing the core con­sti­tu­tion­al rights to life and dig­ni­ty above all else. Published on June 6, 1995, the Court’s opin­ion in S v. Makwanyane drew on inter­na­tion­al legal frame­works, as well as death penal­ty debates in oth­er coun­tries, such as the United States. The Court weighed inher­ent issues in the appli­ca­tion of the death…

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News

Aug 25, 2025

State Spotlight: California Death Row Shrinks Sharply in 2024, Driven by the Resentencing of At Least 45 People to Life Sentences or Less

This week we are fea­tur­ing some arti­cles from the first part of 2025 that we think are worth anoth­er look. We’ll be back with new arti­cles next week. This arti­cle orig­i­nal­ly ran on February 11, 2025. When California Governor Gavin Newsom announced a mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions in 2019, he said that the state’s​“death penal­ty sys­tem has been, by all mea­sures, a fail­ure.” He explained that the death penal­ty​“has dis­crim­i­nat­ed against defen­dants who are mentally ill,…

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News

Jul 02, 2025

Facts About the Death Penalty — Does the Death Penalty Make Communities Safer?

Deterrence is one of the most com­mon­ly expressed rea­sons for use of the death penal­ty, both as a con­sti­tu­tion­al jus­ti­fi­ca­tion and as a pub­lic pol­i­cy ratio­nale. Elected offi­cials have recent­ly called the death penal­ty an​“essen­tial” deter­rent to crime. The argu­ment goes that if some­one knows they could face the death penal­ty, they will not com­mit the crime. Following that rea­son­ing would sug­gest that states with the death penal­ty are safer than states without…

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News

Jun 25, 2025

New Book of Interest: The Slow Death” of U.S. Death Penalty

The death penal­ty in the Unites States is expe­ri­enc­ing what schol­ars call a​“slow death.” In their forth­com­ing book,​“The Slow Death of the Death Penalty: Toward a Postmortem,” edi­tors Todd C. Peppers, Jamie Almallen, and Mary Welek Atwell bring togeth­er death penal­ty experts to exam­ine this shift in the use of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. New death sen­tences and exe­cu­tions still occur in a lim­it­ed num­ber of states; but Peppers et al reflect on the broad­er trends away from use…

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