Books
Items: 141 — 150
Aug 20, 2008
BOOKS: Abolition, One Man’s Battle Against the Death Penalty
A compelling narrative of the legal and political fight to end the death penalty in France has just been released in an English translation. Abolition: One Man’s Battle Against the Death Penalty is authored by Robert Badinter, probably the single person most responsible for abolishing the death penalty in France. He begins his story in 1972 when one of his clients was guillotined in a case he felt was unjust. Upon dedicating his career to abolishing the death penalty, he agreed to…
Read MoreJul 09, 2008
BOOKS: Murder and the Death Penalty in Massachusetts
May 14, 2008
BOOKS: The Death Penalty: A Worldwide Perspective
The Death Penalty: A Worldwide Perspective by Roger Hood and Carolyn Hoyle is the Fourth Edition of a text that highlights the latest developments in the death penalty around the world. Roger Hood utilizes his experience as a consultant to the United Nations’ annual survey of capital punishment in compiling a wide range of information from non-governmental organizations and academic literature. The book explores both the advances in legal challenges to the death penalty and the…
Read MoreMay 07, 2008
NEW VOICES: “How New Jersey Abolished the Death Penalty”
In 1982, as a second term Assemblyman, Raymond Lesniak voted to reinstate the death penalty in New Jersey. In December 2007, New Jersey voted to abolish the death penalty, becoming the first state in 40 years to accomplish this. Senator Lesniak was one of the sponsors and legislative leaders of the abolition bill. He has written a new book: “The Road to Abolition: How New Jersey Abolished the Death Penatly.” In commenting on the book, Senator Lesniak said, “Why do I care so much about the…
Read MoreMar 11, 2008
BOOKS: “Last Rights” by Rev. Joseph Ingle with Introduction by Mike Farrell
Reverend Joseph B. Ingle’s book, Last Rights: Thirteen Fatal Encounters with the State’s Justice, will be re-released in May with a new introduction by Mike Farrell (of MASH) and with its original forward by William Styron. Rev. Ingle, who has counseled inmates on death row for over 30 years, recounts his close relationships with 13 of these inmates before their executions. Devoting a chapter to each one, Ingle stresses the need to see each inmate as an individual. He writes, “The…
Read MoreMar 04, 2008
BOOKS: The Innocence Commission
The Innocence Commission, a new book by Jon B. Gould, describes how the advent of DNA testing and other forensic advances in the criminal justice system have led to serious efforts to understand how so many wrongful convictions have happened. In particular, The Innocence Commission details the first years of the Innocence Commission for Virginia (ICVA), which was the first in the country to conduct systemic research into all wrongful convictions in the state. Gould, the Chair of ICVA,…
Read MoreFeb 21, 2008
BOOKS: “The Execution of Willie Francis”
Author Gilbert King, in his forthcoming book The Execution of Willie Francis, details the story of a young African-American man who endured the electric chair twice before being executed for the murder of a white man in Louisiana. In 1946, an all-white jury convicted Francis, who was 17, and sentenced him to death. The first attempt to execute him by electrocution did not work, and Francis was returned to his death row cell where he remained for almost another year while the U.S.
Read MoreJan 24, 2008
BOOKS: “Crime and Justice: Abolishing the Death Penalty”
The Inter Press Service, with the assistance of the European Commission, has recently published “Crime and Justice: Abolishing the Death Penalty,” collecting more than 100 reports from dozens of countries and every continent. IPS used the voices of those who work directly with the death penalty issue to present a world-wide picture of the status of capital punishment. The stories told in the report are from activists, academics, lawyers and death row inmates. They range from dispatches from…
Read MoreJan 14, 2008
BOOKS: “The Bitter Fruit of American Justice” and “I Shall Not Die”
Two new books address the death penalty from different perspectives: one analyzing the future of capital punishment, the other, by Billy Neal Moore, relates the experience of being on death row. Alan Clarke and Laurelyn Whitt examine two factors that are gaining importance in the debate over capital punishment. The Bitter Fruit of American Justice (Northeastern 2007) contends that increasing opposition to the death penalty throughout the world could affect how other countries relate…
Read MoreJan 07, 2008
BOOKS: New Book Explores Death Penalty Myths
In The Top Ten Death Penalty Myths, professors Rudolph J. Gerber and John M. Johnson explore ten arguments used to support the death penalty and provide readers with current research and studies challenging these arguments. The authors show how “political and community leaders have used myth and emotional appeals to misrepresent the facts about capital executions.” Each chapter begins with a statement in support of the death penalty based on themes such as deterrence, victims and their…
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