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9780814740217

From Lynch Mobs to the Killing State

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780814740217

  • ISBN10:

    0814740219

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2006-05-01
  • Publisher: New York Univ Pr

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Summary

View the Table of Contents. Read the Introduction.ôThe authors give the nation an unflinching view of the shameful influence of racism in death penalty cases. This is a must read for anyone who cares about fairness in application of the death penalty and respect for the rule of law in our modern society.ö--Senator Edward M. KennedyThis book offers thoughtful and wide-ranging assessments of how America's most dramatic punishment intersects with America's deepest and most divisive social problem. These essays go far beyond the obvious and offer much of interest both for those with a particular interest in the death penalty and for those who seek to understand and to ameliorate our country's shameful legacy of racial inequality. This is the rare book that will be helpful to the student, the scholar, and the activist alike. --Carol Steiker, Harvard Law SchoolEssential reading for all who are seeking to understand the contemporary American death penalty or to imagine an America without one. --Jonathan Simon, School of Law-Boalt Hall, University of California, BerkeleyA major contribution. --Randy A. Hertz, NYU School of LawRiveting and very timely. Remarkably, the book creatively assembles social history, demographic and statistical analysis, experimental psychology, and legal history and finds a common truth: the death penalty may be one of the most persistent, self-reinforcing ways we uphold racial division. --Robert Weisberg, Stanford University Law SchoolThe book is bound to influence the thinking of many who tolerate if not actively support the death penalty because of the way it shows how deeply entrenched are the shameful racist attitudes and practices in our nation's dominant (white) culture. --Hugo Adam Bedau, editor of The Death Penalty in AmericaThis is the first recent volume to address race and capital punishment in such a broad, systematic, and--perhaps most importantly--multi-disciplinary fashion. --David R. Dow, University of Houston Law CenterSince 1976, over forty percent of prisoners executed in American jails have been African American or Hispanic. This trend shows little evidence of diminishing, and follows a larger pattern of the violent criminalization of African American populations that has marked the country's history of punishment.In a bold attempt to tackle the looming question of how and why the connection between race and the death penalty has been so strong throughout American history, Ogletree and Sarat headline an interdisciplinary cast of experts in reflecting on this disturbing issue. Insightful original essays approach the topic from legal, historical, cultural, and social science perspectives to show the ways that the death penalty is racialized, the places in the death penalty process where race makes a difference, and the ways that meanings of race in the United States are constructed in and through our practices of capital punishment.From Lynch Mobs to the Killing State not only uncovers the ways that race influences capital punishment, but also attempts to situate the linkage between race and the death penalty in the history of this country, in particular the history of lynching. In its probing examination of how and why the connection between race and the death penalty has been so strong throughout American history, this book forces us to consider how the death penalty gives meaning to race as well as why the racialization of the death penalty is uniquely American.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(20)
Charles J. Ogletree, Jr.
Austin Sarat
PART I: The Meaning and Significance of Race in the Culture of Capital Punishment
Capital Punishment as Legal Lynching?
21(34)
Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn
Making Race Matter in Death Matters
55(41)
Charles J. Ogletree, Jr.
Traces of Slavery: Race and the Death Penalty in Historical Perspective
96(21)
Stuart Banner
PART II: Race and the Death Penalty Process
The Role of Victim's Race and Geography on Death Sentencing: Some Recent Data from Illinois
117(33)
Michael L. Radelet
Glenn L. Pierce
Death in ``Whiteface'': Modern Race Minstrels, Official Lynching, and the Culture of American Apartheid
150(32)
Benjamin Fleury-Steiner
Stereotypes, Prejudice, and Life-and-Death Decision Making: Lessons from Laypersons in an Experimental Setting
182(29)
Mona Lynch
PART III: Race, Politics, and the Death Penalty
Discrimination, Death, and Denial: The Tolerance of Racial Discrimination in Infliction of the Death Penalty
211(49)
Stephen B. Bright
The Rhetoric of Race in the ``New Abolitionism''
260(25)
Austin Sarat
Contributors 285(2)
Index 287

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