Race and the death penalty : the legacy of McCleskey v. Kemp /
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Imprint: | Boulder, Colorado : Lynne Rienner Publishers, Inc., 2016. |
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Description: | 1 online resource. |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12398633 |
Table of Contents:
- McCleskey v. Kemp and the reaffirmation of separate but equal / by David Keys and R.J. Maratea
- Revisiting McCleskey v Kemp : a failure of sociological imagination? / by Tony G. Poveda
- McCleskey and the lingering problem of race / by Ross Kleinstuber
- Overcoming moral peril : how empirical research can affect death penalty debates / by R.J. Maratea
- Capital sentencing and structural racism : the source of bias / by Gennaro F. Vito and George E. Higgins
- Capital case processing in Georgia after McCleskey : more of the same / by Jacqueline Ghislaine Lee, Ray Paternoster, and Michael Rocque
- Addressing contradictions with the social psychology of capital juries and racial bias / by Jamie L. Flexon
- Nothing succeeds like failure : race, decision-making, and proportionality in Oklahoma homicide trials, 1973-2010 / by David Keys and John F. Galliher
- Why is the death penalty needed? / by Robert M. Bohm
- The death penalty's dirty little secret / by Franklin E. Zimring
- Race of victim and American capital punishment / by Franklin E. Zimring.