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E-raamat: Comparative Capital Punishment

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Comparative Capital Punishment offers a set of in-depth, critical and comparative contributions addressing death practices around the world. Despite the dramatic decline of the death penalty in the last half of the twentieth century, capital punishment remains in force in a substantial number of countries around the globe.

This research handbook explores both the forces behind the stunning recent rejection of the death penalty, as well as the changing shape of capital practices where it is retained. The expert contributors address the social, political, economic, and cultural influences on both retention and abolition of the death penalty and consider the distinctive possibilities and pathways to worldwide abolition.

Scholars in the fields of law, sociology, political science and history, as well as human rights lawyers, abolitionists, law makers and judges who wish to remain up-to-date on changing death penalty practices will need Comparative Capital Punishment on their reading list.





Contributors include: S.L. Babcock, S. Bae, R.C. Dieter, B.L. Garrett, E. Girling, C. Hoyle, P. Jabbar, S. Lehrfreund, D. Lourtau, B. Malkani, M. Miao, A. Nazir, A. Novak, K. Pant, D. Pascoe, A. Sarat, M. Sato, W. Schabas, C.S. Steiker, J.M. Steiker, J. Yorke

Arvustused

'The kaleidoscopic contributions to this book provide more comparative insight into capital punishment than any other volume. The Steikers have recruited an all-star team of writers, and they have delivered on everything from methods of execution and miscarriages of justice to capital clemency and international norms. If you want to think better about the death penalty's past, present, and future, read this magnificent book.' --David T. Johnson, University of Hawaii and co-author of The Next Frontier: National Development, Political Change, and the Death Penalty in Asia

List of tables
vii
List of contributors
viii
Preface xiii
PART I INTRODUCTION
1 Introduction: international perspectives on the death penalty
2(28)
Richard C. Dieter
PART II SUBSTANTIVE LAW
2 Deserving of death: the changing scope of capital offenses in an age of death penalty decline
30(24)
Delphine Lourtau
3 Deciding who lives and who dies: eligibility for capital punishment under national and international law
54(22)
Sandra L. Babcock
PART III PROCEDURAL LAW
4 Extradition and non-refoulement
76(20)
Bharat Malkani
5 An unfair fight for justice: legal representation of persons facing the death penalty
96(20)
Sandra L. Babcock
6 Towards a global theory of capital clemency incidence
116(22)
Daniel Pascoe
PART IV ADMINISTRATION
7 Imposing a `mandatory' death penalty: a practice out of sync with evolving standards
138(22)
Parvais Jabbar
8 Methods of execution: the American story in comparative perspective
160(17)
Austin Sarat
Keshav Pant
9 Capital punishment at the intersections of discrimination and disadvantage: the plight of foreign nationals
177(24)
Carolyn Hoyle
10 Innocence and the global death penalty
201(16)
Brandon L. Garrett
PART V INSTITUTIONS
11 International law and the abolition of the death penalty
217(15)
William A. Schabas
12 The role of institutions in the norm life cycle: the United Nations and the anti-capital punishment norm
232(15)
Sangmin Bae
13 Regional institutions and death penalty abolition: comparative perspectives and their discontents
247(25)
Evi Girling
14 Undoing the British colonial legacy, the judicial reform of the death penalty
272(29)
Saul Lehrfreund
PART VI THE FUTURE OF THE DEATH PENALTY
15 Refraining the debate on attitudes towards the death penalty
301(18)
Mai Sato
16 Pulling states towards abolitionism: the power of acculturation as a socialization mechanism
319(22)
Michelle Miao
17 Imagining utopia: the global abolition of the death penalty
341(30)
Jon Yorke
Amna Nazir
18 After abolition: the empirical, jurisprudential and strategic legacy of transnational death penalty litigation
371(17)
Andrew Novak
19 Global abolition of capital punishment: contributors, challenges and conundrums
388(23)
Carol S. Steiker
Jordan M. Steiker
Index 411
Edited by Carol S. Steiker, Harvard Law School and Jordan M. Steiker, The University of Texas School of Law, US