
Capital Punishment: Strategies for Abolition
Cambridge University Press, 2/5/2004
EAN 9780521815901, ISBN10: 0521815908
Hardcover, 390 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.5 cm
Language: English
What are the critical factors that determine whether a country replaces, retains or restores the death penalty? Why do some countries maintain the death penalty in theory but in reality rarely invoke it? By asking these questions, the editors hope to isolate the core issues that influence the formulation of legislation so that they can be incorporated into strategies for advising governments considering changes to their policy on capital punishment. They also seek to redress the imbalance in research, which tends to focus almost exclusively on the experience of the USA, by covering a range of countries such as South Korea, Lithuania, Japan and the British Caribbean Commonwealth. This valuable contribution to the debates around capital punishment contains contributions from leading academics, campaigners and legal practitioners and will be an important resource for students, academics, NGOs, policy makers, lawyers and jurists.
List of figures
List of tables
Notes on the contributors
1. Capital punishment
improve it or remove it? Peter Hodgkinson
2. International law and the death penalty
reflecting or promoting change? William A. Schabas
3. Doctors and the death penalty
ethics and a cruel punishment Robert Ferris and James Welsh
4. Replacing the death penalty
the vexed issue of alternative sanctions Andrew Coyle
5. Religion and the death penalty in the United States
past and present James J. Megivern
6. On botched executions Marian J. Borg and Michael L. Radelet
7. Death as a penalty in the Shari'Ä M. Cherif Bassiouni
8. Abolishing the death penalty in the United States
an analysis of institutional obstacles and future prospects Hugo Adam Bedau
9. Capital punishment in the United State
moratorium efforts and other key developments Ronald J. Tabak
10. The experiences of Lithuania's journey to abolition Alexsandras Dobryninas
11. The death penalty in South Korea and Japan
'Asian values' and the debate about capital punishment? Byung-Sun Cho
12. Georgia, former republic of the USSR
managing abolition Eric Svanidze
13. Capital punishment in the Commonwealth Caribbean
colonial inheritance, colonial remedy? Julian B. Knowles
14. Public opinion and the death penalty William A. Schabas
15. Capital punishment
meeting the needs of the families of the homicide victim and the condemned Peter Hodgkinson
Index.