Studies
Items: 461 — 470
Sep 18, 2006
ABA Panel Calls for Extensive Changes in Florida’s Death Penalty System
An eight-member panel convened by the American Bar Association and consisting of prosecutors, defense lawyers, and judges concluded a two-year study of Florida’s death penalty system. The panel unanimously proposed extensive changes to improve the accuracy and fairness of the state’s system. “Despite the best efforts of many legislators, judges and lawyers, much more needs to be done to ensure that Florida’s death penalty system avoids executing the innocent,” said…
Read MoreSep 13, 2006
New York Conference to Address Aspects of Punishment in the U.S.
The New School in New York City is sponsoring a research conference entitled “Punishment: The U.S. Record” to be held November 30 and December 1, 2006. The conference will cover all aspects of imprisonment and punishment in the U.S., but some speakers will focus on the death penalty. In particular, John Donohue III will examine recent deterrence studies and David Garland will discuss the function that capital punishment serves in society. Other speakers at the conference include…
Read MoreSep 11, 2006
Justice Department Reports Decrease in Violent Crime in 2005
According to a Bureau of Justice Statistics Report released on September 10, violent crime in the United States decreased slightly in 2005, continuing a decade-long trend in fewer victimizations. Comparing two-year periods, violent crime was lowest in the Northeast region of the country in 2004-05, and that region also experienced the largest decrease in violent crime from 2002-03 to 2004-05. Since 1993, violent crime has decreased by about 58% in the U.S. The BJS survey of crime…
Read MoreSep 06, 2006
New Government Study Finds Over Half of Inmates Have Mental Problems
According to a Bureau of Justice Statistics study released September 6, more than half of all prison and jail inmates, including 56% of state prisoners, 45% of federal prisoners, and 64% of local jail inmates have mental health problems. The study was based on reporting of symptoms by inmates rather than through medical diagnosis. Among state prisoners with mental problems, 43% had symptoms of mania, 23% had major depression, and 15% had psychotic disorders. Having mental health…
Read MoreAug 28, 2006
INTERNATIONAL RESOURCE: “A Rare and Arbitrary Fate” — the Death Penalty in Trinidad & Tobago
A new study on the use of the death penalty in Trinidad and Tobago has been published by Roger Hood and Florence Seemungal. The authors closely examine prosecutions under the country’s mandatory death penalty statute, which requires imposition of a death sentence whenever a defendant is found guilty of murder. The study found that, despite a high number of killings, relatively few people were convicted of murder, and not necessarily those who committed the most heinous crimes.The authors note…
Read MoreAug 14, 2006
RESOURCES AND RESEARCH: Symposium to Explore the Future of Death Penalty Research
A symposium entitled “The Next Generation of Death Penalty Research: Priorities, Strategies, and an Agenda” will be sponsored by the Capital Punishment Research Initiative of the State University of New York in Albany on October 6 & 7, 2006. Speakers will explore contemporary death penalty laws and practices, and the role of empirical research in changing capital punishment policies. Included in an extensive list of impressive speakers are: David Baldus of the University of Iowa…
Read MoreAug 01, 2006
U.N. Human Rights Committee Urges U.S to Place Moratorium on Death Penalty
Citing the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, a United Nations panel recommended that the United States impose a moratorium on executions. The report, issued on July 28 by the U.N. Human Rights Committee, stated the panel was “concerned by studies according to which the death penalty may be imposed disproportionately on ethnic minorities as well as on low-income groups, a problem which does not seem to be fully acknowledged.” The panel, made up of 18…
Read MoreJul 28, 2006
NEW RESOURCES: Scientific American Investigates “CSI Effect”
An article in the July Scientific American examines the extent to which the television program “C.S.I.” and similar forensically-focused programs have increased the expectations of jurors in criminal trials. The article quotes University of California, Irvine, researchers Simon Cole and Rachel Dioso questioning the real impact of such programs: “That television might have an effect on courtrooms is not implausible… but to argue that ‘C.S.I.’ and similar shows are actually raising the…
Read MoreJul 27, 2006
California Blue Ribbon Commission Recommends Recording of Interrogations
The California Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice has unanimously recommended that state lawmakers require electronic recording of all jailhouse interrogations. The commission added that the law should include a provision stating that if an officer fails to record an interrogation, jurors would be instructed to view the defendant’s statement with caution. Emphasizing that false confessions have been identified as the second most frequent cause of wrongful…
Read MoreJul 18, 2006
RAND Study Finds No Federal Race Bias in Death Penalty From 1995 to 2000
A recent RAND Corporation study of the federal death penalty from 1995 to 2000 found no evidence of racial bias. Even though the investigators found that the death penalty was more often sought against defendants who murdered white victims, researchers ultimately concluded that the characteristics of the crime, and not the racial characteristics of the victim or the defendant, could be used to make accurate predictions of whether federal prosecutors would seek the death penalty. The RAND…
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