DPI Page: Foreign Nationals on United States’ Death Rows
Some of those on death row in the U.S. are citizens of other countries, raising human rights issues and issues of U.S. compliance with international treaties.
Cornell Law School: International Death Penalty Database
Maintained by the Cornell Center on the Death Penalty Worldwide (Cornell Law School)
Overview
More than 70% of the world’s countries have abolished capital punishment in law or practice. However, the death penalty continues to exist in many parts of the world, especially in countries with large populations and those with authoritarian rule. In recent decades, there has been a clear trend away from capital punishment, as many countries have either abolished the death penalty or discontinued its use. The U.S. remains an outlier among its close allies and other democracies in its continued application of the death penalty.
While international law does not prohibit the death penalty, most countries consider it a violation of human rights. The use of the death penalty worldwide is relevant in evaluating U.S. standards of decency and what should be considered cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment. Some Justices of the Supreme Court have referred to international law as further affirmation of their own conclusions about the death penalty, particularly as it may apply to specific classes of defendants such as juvenile offenders.
At Issue
There are a number of disagreements that may arise between countries that impose the death penalty and those that do not. Countries without the death penalty are particularly concerned when one of their citizens faces execution in the U.S. Some countries refuse to extradite individuals to the U.S., or even to provide incriminating evidence, if the defendant could face the death penalty. In addition, many countries and international bodies consider the death penalty to be a human rights issue and various U.S. death-penalty practices have been criticized as violating U.S. treaty obligations and international human rights law. The concern for human rights around the world has always been important in U.S. diplomacy, but the U.S. is often challenged because of its use of the death penalty and the protection that affords to other countries that use it in particularly abusive ways.
What DPI Offers
International research on the use of the death penalty owes particular gratitude to Amnesty International, which has regularly monitored and reported on capital punishment around the world. DPI passes this information on with attribution through its website and makes an effort to highlight those areas where international norms and practices reflect on the death penalty in the U.S. DPI has issued one report focusing on this topic and regularly highlights relevant research and developments that occur around the world.
News & Developments
News
Jan 20, 2026
Former South Korean President Faces Possible Death Sentence as a Result of Insurrection Charges
If convicted, former South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol faces a possible death sentence, life imprisonment with labor, or life imprisonment without labor for his failed attempt to impose martial law in December 2024. On January 13, 2026, special prosecutor Cho Eun-suk’s team recommended a death sentence for Mr. Yoon in the first insurrection trial of a South Korean head of state in three decades. Although the nation retains the death penalty, South Korea has not…
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Jan 06, 2026
Saudi Arabia Records Historic Number of Executions for the Second Consecutive Year
On December 21, 2025, the European Saudi Organisation for Human Rights (ESOHR) reported that Saudi Arabia carried out 347 executions in 2025, marking a new high for the nation, after a record-breaking 345 executions in 2024. The majority (79%) of executions in 2025 were for crimes failing to meet the international legal threshold of a“most serious crime” and predominately included executions for drug-related charges (69% of all executions). Due to a lack of…
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Dec 03, 2025
Women in Prison and on Death Row: A Global Analysis
The Guardian’s recent four-part series examines the experiences of women in prison around the world, with a focus on those facing the death penalty. The series illuminates a largely overlooked issue within global criminal legal systems: the failure to recognize how gender-based violence shapes women’s journeys to incarceration and death row. The global incarceration of women has reached its highest levels, with more than 733,000 women and girls held in prisons…
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Oct 31, 2025
Article of Interest: New Report Highlights How De Facto Abolition Status Hides the “Human, Political and Legal Effects” of Retaining Death Penalty Laws
A new report published on the 40th anniversary of the United Nation’s creation of the‘abolitionist de facto’ (ADF) category, Between Retention and Abolition: Making Sense of a Death Penalty Without Executions, examines the legal, political, and symbolic role of the death penalty in countries that retain the death penalty but have either not carried out an execution in 10 years or have established an official moratorium. Authored by researchers at UK-based The…
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Sep 25, 2025
Iran Hits 1000 Execution Mark, Highest Total in Three Decades
Norway-based Iran Human Rights (IHRNGO) has reported that at least 1000 people have been executed in Iran between January 1 and September 23, 2025 — a thirty year high. This is the fifth consecutive year that Iran has experienced an increase in executions, with the biggest year-over-year increase (43%) occurring in 2023, in the aftermath of the“Women, Life, Freedom” nationwide protests. Most executions continue to be carried out for offenses that do not meet the…
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