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October 08, 2007

Bandes on the Persistence of the Death Penalty in the United States

Susan A. Bandes (DePaul University - College of Law) has posted The Heart Has its Reasons: Examining the Strange Persistence of the American Death Penalty (42 Studies in Law, Politics and Society, Vol. 42, No. 1, 2008) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:

The debate about the future of the death penalty often focuses on whether its supporters are animated by instrumental or expressive values, and if the latter, what values the penalty does in fact express, where those values originated, and how deeply entrenched they are. In this article I argue that a more explicit recognition of the emotional sources of support for and opposition to the death penalty will have salutary consequences for the clarity of the debate. The focus on emotional variables reveals that the demarcation between instrumental and expressive values is porous; both types of values are informed (or uninformed) by fear, outrage, compassion, selective empathy and other emotional attitudes. More fundamentally, though history, culture and politics are essential aspects of the discussion, the resilience of the death penalty cannot be adequately understood when the affect is stripped from explanations for its support. Ultimately, the death penalty will not die without a societal change of heart.

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» Susan Bandes Mentioned on Sentencing Law and Policy from The University of Chicago Law School Faculty Blog
Douglas Berman's Sentencing Law and Policy blog links today to a paper by Susan Bandes, who is a visiting professor at Chicago this year, called The Heart Has its Reasons: Examining the Strange Persistence of the American Death Penalty. See [Read More]

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