Law Reviews
Items: 91 — 100
Jun 07, 2006
NEW RESOURCE: Amicus Journal Features Articles on International Death Penalty Developments
The latest edition of the Amicus Journal is now available and features articles related to death penalty topics such as gender bias and jurors, as well as information on international capital punishment developments in the Caribbean and Africa. The journal features a story on the Middle Temple Library’s Capital Punishment Collection in Great Britain, an archive of textbooks, case-preparation aides, film documentaries, and other primary sources on the death penalty. The Amicus Journal…
Read MoreJan 26, 2006
NEW RESOURCE: Researchers Retest the Deterrence Studies
A new edition of the Stanford Law Review contains an article entitled Uses and Abuses of Empirical Evidence in the Death Penalty Debate. The article examines and performs comparison tests on recent studies that have claimed a deterrent effect to the death penalty. Authors John J. Donohue of Yale Law School and Justin Wolfers of the University of Pennsylvania state their goal and conclusions: (O)ur aim in this Article is to provide a thorough assessment of the statistical evidence on…
Read MoreNov 17, 2005
NEW RESOURCE: Law Review Explores Mental Illness and the Death Penalty
A new edition of the Catholic University Law Review includes papers from the university’s recent symposium on mental illness and the death penalty. The presentations by experts delivered during the symposium address how policy makers and the courts might resolve the propriety of executing those with mental illness. Articles examine recommendations from the Task Force of the ABA’s Section of Individual Rights and Reponsibilities regarding mental disabilities and the death penalty.
Read MoreSep 23, 2005
INTERNATIONAL RESOURCE: “Amicus Journal” Highlights Death Penalty Developments
The Amicus Journal discusses death penalty issues from around the world. The latest edition contains articles on the “teamwork” approach used by capital defense attorneys in Virginia, Africa’s progress in abandoning the death penalty, and a feature on the experience of being a lawyer on the front lines of capital litigation in the U.S. The publication also examines the recent U.S. Supreme Court cases of Medellin v. Dretke and Miller-El v. Dretke. (13 Amicus Journal (2005), published in London…
Read MoreSep 22, 2005
Study Finds Race of Victim, Geography Are Key Factors In California Death Sentencing
According to a new study to be published in the Santa Clara Law Review, a defandant in California is more likely to be sentenced to death for killing a white person than for murdering a person of any other race, despite there being more black and Hispanic murder victims in the state. The research also shows that geography plays a key role in whether the death penalty will be sought in a particular case. The study implies that the loss of white lives is considered more important in the…
Read MoreSep 09, 2005
New Resource: A Review of Deterrence Studies and other Social Science Research
Robert Weisberg, a professor at Stanford University’s School of Law, examines recent studies on deterrence and the death penalty, as well as other social science research ragarding capital punishment in the U.S. In The Death Penalty Meets Social Science: Deterrence and Jury Behavior Under New Scrutiny, Weisberg notes that many of the new studies claiming to find that the death penalty deters murder have been legitimately criticized for omitting key variables and for not addressing the…
Read MoreAug 16, 2005
NEW RESOURCE: Research Examines Those Who Volunteer for Execution
A new Michigan Law Review article by Professor John Blume of Cornell Law School examines the relationship between “volunteering” for execution and suicide. Blume found that nearly 88% of all death row inmates who have “volunteered” for execution have struggled with mental illness and/or substance abuse. He writes that there is an especially strong link between “volunteerism” and mental illness. Of the “volunteer” executions he reviewed, 14 involved schizophrenia and several more…
Read MoreAug 12, 2005
NEW RESOURCE: The Death Penalty’s Impact on U.S. Foreign Relations
A new law review article by international death penalty expert Mark Warren concludes that the retention of capital punishment in the United States distances the nation from its closest allies “in ways both symbolic and tangible, and the costs of that isolation are rising steadily.” Warren’s article, Death, Dissent, and Diplomacy: The U.S. Death Penalty as an Obstacle to Foreign Relations, examines a broad range of concerns, including treaty compliance and global security. Warren notes…
Read MoreAug 10, 2005
NEW RESOURCE: A Study of Exonerations in the U.S.
Newly published research examining 340 exonerations in the United States between 1989 and 2003 found that a significant number of those who were wrongly convicted had been sentenced to death. Researchers note that this finding appears to reflect two patterns: capital defendants are more likely to be convicted in error, and false convictions are more likely to be detected when defendants are on death row. The paper, authored by Professor Samuel Gross of the University of Michigan Law School…
Read MoreMay 16, 2005
NEW RESOURCE: Research On Victim Impact Statements
A new research paper by Wayne A. Logan of the William Mitchell College of Law examines the constitutional, ethical and legal issues raised by victim impact evidence. In his article, “Victims, Survivors and the Decisions to Seek and Impose Death,” Logan notes that the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark 1991 decision in Payne v. Tennessee opened the door for survivors of murder victims to testify about the social, emotional, and economic losses resulting from the murder of their loved one. Since…
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