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Jurisprudence of Capital Punishment


Law 445

3

Upper-Level

Rigorous Writing Experience (RWE)

No

No

This course examines capital punishment from a philosophical and jurisprudential perspective and considers it in relation to the goals of punishment (retribution, deterrence, incapacitation, and rehabilitation), the concept of the rule of law in society, majority rule and public opinion, and the nature of judicial decision making. The heart of the seminar will involve the modern approach to capital punishment as reflected in the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1972 to the present, with an intense focus on what various Justices advocated and how constitutional law develops in some ways based on the make-up of the court. We will also discuss contemporary issues including the scope, utility, and fairness of capital punishment with respect to mental retardation, age, gender, and race, evaluating how these notions have manifested themselves in the decisions of the Supreme Court and specifically the thinking of individual justices. [NOTE: The reading requirements are substantial the first six weeks of the semester.]

Criminal Law

Recommended: Criminal Procedure


G. Widenhouse (Adjunct)

Spring