A
Brief Bibliography
Books
on the death penalty are many and the literature continues to expand. The
following are only a selection, each of which contains a bibliography. Many
insightful articles can be found in law review journals and in general
circulation magazines. Providing citations are beyond our capability. As so
many facets in American culture – race, class, mental competence and age to name
four - play pivotal roles in the DP; thoughtful discussions may sometimes be
found within books addressing those issues.
Actual Innocence; Barry Scheck, Peter Neufeld, Jim Dwyer. Doublday; 2000. By examining actual
cases of wrongful convictions, the authors illustrate and discuss the many
fallibilities of the American system of jurisprudence, which too often give rise
to errors in conviction and executions.
Challenging Capital
Punishment: Legal and Social Science Approaches
;
Kenneth C. Hass and James A. Inciardi, editors; Sage Criminal Justice Annuals,
Vol. 24; 1988. Research papers on various societal considerations regarding
the use of the Death Penalty.
Dead Man Walking: An
Eyewitness Account of the Death Penalty in the Unite States
;
Helen Prejean, C.S.J. Random House, 1993. The journey of one person during
her work as religious advisor to several condemned men in
Louisiana. Through her life, Sister Prejean
invites us to examine the ramifications of murder, and of execution, on the
victims’ and the murderers’ families and friends as well as on the state
employees who carry out the sentence and also on society.
Death Penalty in
America: Current Controversies
;
edited by Hugo A. Bedau; Oxford U. Press; 1997. Third in a series of books
with the same title (the editions of 1964 and 1982 being the other volumes, this
is an anthology of critical essays and data on every aspect of capital
punishment in America.
The Death Penalty: An
Historical and Theological Survey
;
James J. McGivern; Paulist Press; 1997. A review of the development of
Western Christian thought on capital punishment over its 2000 year existence.
Dignity Denied: The
Experience of Murder Victims’ Family Members Who Oppose the
Death Penalty; Robert Renny Cushing and
Susannah Sheffer; Murder Victims’ Families for Reconciliation; 2002. A brief
(60 pages) essay examining the lack of respect shown by state and local
prosecutors and victims’ assistance offices to those relatives of murder victims
who oppose capital punish, accompanied by model language to enforce equal
treatment by prosecutors of all victims family members.
Proximity to Death;
William S. McFeely; W.W. Norton and Sons; 2000. An eminent scholar finds
himself for the first time an expert witness for the defense in a capital trial,
and through that experience writes of his personal views of many aspects and
persons involved in het process.
The Death Penalty: For
and Against
; Louis P. Pojman and
Jeffrey Reiman; Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 1998. A thoughtful
exploration of both sides by two philosophers, each of whom provides an
exposition and then a rebuttal of the other.
When the State Kills:
Capital Punishment and the American Condition;
Austin Sacat; Princeton U. Press; 2001. Nine stand-alone essays on the
politics of vengeance, state killing in the legal process, and the culture of
capital punishment.
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