Duke University Press
Beyond Repair?
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Edited by:
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About this book
A number of the essays scrutinize thinking about capital punishment. They examine why, following almost two decades of strong public support for the death penalty, public opinion in favor of it has recently begun to decline. Beyond Repair? presents some of the findings of the Capital Jury Project, a nationwide research initiative that has interviewed over one thousand people who served as jurors in capital trials. It looks at what goes through the minds of jurors asked to consider imposing the death penalty, how qualified they are to make such an important decision, and how well they understand the judge’s instructions. Contributors also investigate the risk of executing the innocent, the role that race plays in determining which defendants are sentenced to death, and the effect of expanded restrictions on access to federal appellate relief. The postscript contemplates the peculiarities of our contemporary system of capital punishment, including the alarming variance in execution rates from state to state.
Filled with current insights and analysis, Beyond Repair? will provide valuable information to attorneys, political scientists, criminologists, and all those wanting to participate knowledgeably in the debates about the death penalty in America.
Contributors. Ken Armstrong, John H. Blume, Theodore Eisenberg, Phoebe C. Ellsworth, Stephen P. Garvey, Samuel R. Gross, Sheri Lynn Johnson, Steve Mills, William A. Schabas, Larry W. Yackle, Franklin E. Zimring
Author / Editor information
Stephen P. Garvey is Professor of Law at Cornell Law School.
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Frontmatter
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CONTENTS
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Acknowledgments
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Introduction
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1 : Second Thoughts: Americans’ Views on the Death Penalty at the Turn of the Century
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2 : Capital Punishment, Federal Courts, and the Writ of Habeas Corpus
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3 : ‘‘Until I Can Be Sure’’: How the Threat of Executing the Innocent Has Transformed the Death Penalty Debate
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4 : Race and Capital Punishment
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5 : Lessons from the Capital Jury Project
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6 : International Law and the Abolition of the Death Penalty
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Postscript: The Peculiar Present of American Capital Punishment
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Contributors
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Index
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