The Mere Extinguishment of [Human] Life
Death Penalty scholars and abolitionists have long struggled to find an effective interpretation of the Eighth Amendment to address the failures of the Supreme Court's constitutional regulation of the death penalty. Based in historical and quantitative research, this paper identifies and combin...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International social science review 2020-12, Vol.96 (4), p.1-46 |
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description | Death Penalty scholars and abolitionists have long struggled to find an effective interpretation of the Eighth Amendment to address the failures of the Supreme Court's constitutional regulation of the death penalty. Based in historical and quantitative research, this paper identifies and combines two categories of death penalty abolitionism that argue effectively against capital punishment. The paper works forward from Founding-era primary sources on capital punishment through complex Supreme Court precedents and the challenges of constitutional regulation of the death penalty, culminating in an integration of multiple strains of death penalty abolitionism into an historically informed interpretation of the Eighth Amendment well-within the Supreme Court's established parameters for constitutional death penalty litigation. While this paper is squarely against the death penalty, its chief aim is to develop a new and comprehensive interpretation of the Eighth Amendment and provide the necessary evidentiary ammunition for its use. |
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subjects | Abolition of slavery American history Banner, Stuart Book publishing Capital punishment Clemency International economic relations |
title | The Mere Extinguishment of [Human] Life |
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