Books
Items: 181 — 190
May 08, 2006
BOOKS: A Mother’s Experience with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome and the Death Penalty
Katherine Norgard’s recent book, “Hard to Place: A Crime of Alcohol,” is a personal account of the trauma experienced by her family when her adopted son is charged with a capital crime. The book is the author’s story of fighting to save her son after he was sentenced to death for the 1989 murder of an elderly couple in Tuscon, Arizona. At the time of his trial, she still did not know that her son, John Eastlack, had been born with fetal alcohol syndrome, despite his signs of mental…
Read MoreApr 28, 2006
BOOKS: Stories about Executions
“A Meal to Die For” is a short story by Professor Robert Johnson examining capital punishment through the eyes of a man approaching his execution. The story is part of The Crying Wall and Other Prison Stories, a larger collection of short stories by a variety of authors. In “A Meal to Die For,” Johnson weaves the death row prisoner’s last meal with the gradual process of lethal injection, resulting in a painful death. Robert Johnson is a Professor of Justice,…
Read MoreApr 26, 2006
Harvard Conference Explores Race and the Death Penalty
A May 2006 conference held at the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice at Harvard Law School examined new research, legal defense, and public response to the issue of race and the death penalty. The conference, “From Lynch Mobs to the Killing State: A National Conference on Race and the Death Penalty,” featured a number of national academic and legal experts including Barry Scheck, Peter Neufeld, Charles Ogletree, Rubin “Hurricane” Carter, George…
Read MoreMar 29, 2006
NEW RESOURCES: Michael Meltsner’s “The Making of a Civil Rights Lawyer”
A new book by Michael Meltsner, The Making of a Civil Rights Lawyer, provides a personal history of the civil rights movement from the perspective of an attorney committed to social change. Meltsner’s writings bring to life a seminal period of legal reform in U.S. history. The book discusses famous cases and the turning points in the civil rights and death penalty movements. Stephen Bright of the Southern Center for Human Rights notes, “Michael Meltsner has performed a great public…
Read MoreMar 07, 2006
NEW RESOURCE: Wounds That Do Not Bind: Victim-based Perspectives on the Death Penalty
Wounds That Do Not Bind: Victim-based Perspectives on the Death Penalty, a new book by James R. Acker and David Reed Karp, examines how family members and advocates for victims address the impact of capital punishment. The book presents the personal stories of victims’ family members and their interactions with the criminal justice system. It also examines the relevant areas of legal research, including the use of victim impact evidence in capital trials, how capital punishment…
Read MoreMar 02, 2006
NEW RESOURCE: “Death By Design” Examines Psychology Behind U.S. Death Penalty
In his new book, Death by Design: Capital Punishment as a Social Psychological System, Craig Haney argues that capital punishment, and particularly the events that lead to death sentencing itself, are maintained through a system that distances and disengages people from the true nature of the task. Haney, a professor of psychology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, relies on his own research and that other of other scientists in approaching the question, “How can normal,…
Read MoreJan 24, 2006
BOOKS: “Truth Be Told: Life Lessons from Death Row”
Truth Be Told: Life Lessons From Death Row features correspondence between Agnes Vadas and Richard Nields, who is on death row in Ohio. The book contains letters exchanged between the two over six years. They discuss a wide range of topics, including life on death row, how they have coped with challenges in life, and the lessons they have learned from hardship. Agnes Vadas is a musician and human rights activist from Washington. (AuthorHouse, 2005). See…
Read MoreDec 31, 2005
Capital Consequences: Families of the Condemned Tell Their Stories
Capital Consequences: Families of the Condemned Tell Their Stories is a new book by Rachel King of the ACLU’s Capital Punishment Project. The book focuses on the impact that the death penalty has on the families of those who have been condemned to die. King, who also wrote Don’t Kill in Our Names: Families of Murder Victims Speak Out Against the Death Penalty, describes these individuals as the unseen victims of capital punishment and highlights the experience of having loved ones on death…
Read MoreDec 31, 2005
Hidden Victims
“Hidden Victims,” a new book by sociologist Susan F. Sharp of the University of Oklahoma, examines the impact of capital punishment on the families of those facing execution. Through a series of in-depth interviews with families of the accused, Sharp illustrates from a sociological standpoint how family members and friends of those on death row are, in effect, indirect victims of the initial crime. The book emphasizes their responses to sentencing, as well as how they grieve and face an…
Read MoreDec 29, 2005
NEW BOOKS: “The Dead Alive” Explores Wrongful Convictions
Rob Warden, Executive Director of the Center on Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern University School of Law, has written a book about one of the first accounts of a death penalty exoneration in the U.S. Wilkie Collins, a British author, had written a novel entitled “The Dead Alive” about the convictions and death sentences of Jesse and Stephen Boorn for a murder committed in 1819. They were later exonerated. Warden’s book is entitled “Wilkie Collins’s The Dead Alive: The Novel, the Case,…
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