Fichier de travail (INPUT) : ./DUMP-TEXT/1/17-utf8.txt
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Forme recherchée : ([Pp]eine de mort)|([Pp]eine capitale)|([Dd]eath penalty)|([Cc]apital punishment)|死刑
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- Ligne n°3 : Capital punishment debate in the United States
- Ligne n°8 : Opposition to capital punishment in the United States existed as early
Ligne n°9 : as the colonial period. Opposition to the death penalty peaked in ...
Ligne n°8 : ... Opposition to capital punishment in the United States existed as early- Ligne n°9 : as the colonial period. Opposition to the death penalty peaked in
Ligne n°10 : 1966,^[1] rising to 47% opposition, higher than those who supported it ...
Ligne n°10 : ... 1966,^[1] rising to 47% opposition, higher than those who supported it- Ligne n°11 : (42%), the rest (11%) had 'no opinion'. The death penalty increased in
Ligne n°12 : popularity throughout the 1970s and 1980s, peaking in 1994 at 80%; ...
Ligne n°12 : ... popularity throughout the 1970s and 1980s, peaking in 1994 at 80%;- Ligne n°13 : since then, the anti-death penalty movement has strengthened again and
Ligne n°14 : the most recent Gallup poll in 2011 shows that 35% of Americans oppose ...
Ligne n°14 : ... the most recent Gallup poll in 2011 shows that 35% of Americans oppose- Ligne n°15 : the death penalty, an increase of over 80% over the last 17 years.
- Ligne n°17 : Arguments in opposition to the death penalty in the US include: the
Ligne n°18 : fact that a significant number of death row inmates are found to be ...
Ligne n°26 : ... wrong to kill then it is absolutely not relatively wrong—most religious- Ligne n°27 : bodies in the USA oppose the death penalty.^[2]^[3]
Ligne n°36 : ... + 1.4 Third abolitionist era, mid-20th century- Ligne n°37 : + 1.5 Contemporary anti-death penalty movement
Ligne n°38 : o 1.5.1 Public opinion ...
Ligne n°51 : ... European Enlightenment philosophers such as Montesquieu, Voltaire (who- Ligne n°52 : became convinced the death penalty was cruel and unnecessary^[4]) and
Ligne n°53 : Bentham. In addition to various philosophers, many members of Quakers, ...
Ligne n°53 : ... Bentham. In addition to various philosophers, many members of Quakers,- Ligne n°54 : Mennonites and other peace churches opposed the death penalty as well.
Ligne n°55 : Perhaps the most influential essay for the anti-death penalty movement ...
Ligne n°54 : ... Mennonites and other peace churches opposed the death penalty as well.- Ligne n°55 : Perhaps the most influential essay for the anti-death penalty movement
Ligne n°56 : was Cesare Beccaria's 1767 essay, On Crimes and Punishment. Beccaria’s ...
Ligne n°57 : ... strongly opposed the state’s right to take lives and criticized the- Ligne n°58 : death penalty as having little deterrent effect. After the American
Ligne n°59 : Revolution, influential and well-known Americans, such as Thomas ...
Ligne n°60 : ... Jefferson, Benjamin Rush, and Benjamin Franklin made efforts to reform- Ligne n°61 : or abolish the death penalty in the United States. All three joined the
Ligne n°62 : Philadelphia Society for Alleviating the Miseries of Public Prisons, ...
Ligne n°62 : ... Philadelphia Society for Alleviating the Miseries of Public Prisons,- Ligne n°63 : which opposed capital punishment. Following colonial times, the
Ligne n°64 : anti-death penalty movement has risen and fallen throughout history. In ...
Ligne n°63 : ... which opposed capital punishment. Following colonial times, the- Ligne n°64 : anti-death penalty movement has risen and fallen throughout history. In
Ligne n°65 : Against Capital Punishment: Anti-Death Penalty Movement in America, ...
Ligne n°64 : ... anti-death penalty movement has risen and fallen throughout history. In- Ligne n°65 : Against Capital Punishment: Anti-Death Penalty Movement in America,
- Ligne n°65 : Against Capital Punishment: Anti-Death Penalty Movement in America,
Ligne n°66 : Herbert H. Haines describes the presence of the anti-death penalty ...
Ligne n°65 : ... Against Capital Punishment: Anti-Death Penalty Movement in America,- Ligne n°66 : Herbert H. Haines describes the presence of the anti-death penalty
Ligne n°67 : movement as existing in four different eras.^[5] ...- Ligne n°71 : The anti-death penalty movement began to pick up pace in the 1830s and
Ligne n°72 : many Americans called for abolition of the death penalty. Anti-death ...
Ligne n°71 : ... The anti-death penalty movement began to pick up pace in the 1830s and- Ligne n°72 : many Americans called for abolition of the death penalty. Anti-death
Ligne n°73 : penalty sentiment rose as a result of the Jacksonian era, which ...- Ligne n°79 : Although some called for complete abolition of the death penalty, the
Ligne n°80 : elimination of public hangings was the main focus. Initially, ...
Ligne n°83 : ... community to watch. However, after multiple states restricted- Ligne n°84 : executions to prisons or prison yards, the anti-death penalty movement
Ligne n°85 : could no longer capitalize on the horrible details of execution. ...- Ligne n°87 : The anti-death penalty gained some success by the end of the 1850s as
Ligne n°88 : Michigan, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin passed abolition bills. ...- Ligne n°104 : The anti-death penalty gained momentum again at the end of the 19th
Ligne n°105 : century. Populist and progressive reforms contributed to the reawakened ...
Ligne n°105 : ... century. Populist and progressive reforms contributed to the reawakened- Ligne n°106 : anti-capital punishment sentiment. In addition, a “socially conscious”
Ligne n°107 : form of Christianity and the growing support of “scientific” ...
Ligne n°109 : ... introduced the electric chair in 1890. This method was supposed to be- Ligne n°110 : more humane and appease death penalty opponents. However, abolitionists
Ligne n°111 : condemned this method and claimed it was inhumane and similar to ...
Ligne n°114 : ... penalty and suggested more criminology-based methods should be used to- Ligne n°115 : reduce crime.^[6] Anti-death penalty activism of this period was
Ligne n°116 : largely state and locally based. An organization called the Anti-Death ...
Ligne n°117 : ... Penalty League was established Massachusetts in 1897.^[7] However,- Ligne n°118 : national leagues, such as the Anti-capital Punishment Society of
Ligne n°119 : America and the Committee on Capital Punishment of the National ...
Ligne n°118 : ... national leagues, such as the Anti-capital Punishment Society of- Ligne n°119 : America and the Committee on Capital Punishment of the National
Ligne n°120 : Committee on Prisons, developed shortly after. Many judges, ...
Ligne n°120 : ... Committee on Prisons, developed shortly after. Many judges,- Ligne n°121 : prosecutors, and police opposed the abolition of capital punishment.
Ligne n°122 : They believed capital punishment held a strong deterrent capacity and ...
Ligne n°121 : ... prosecutors, and police opposed the abolition of capital punishment.- Ligne n°122 : They believed capital punishment held a strong deterrent capacity and
Ligne n°123 : that abolishment would result in more violence, chaos, and lynching. ...
Ligne n°130 : ... The group focused on educating the public about the moral and pragmatic- Ligne n°131 : trouble of the death penalty. They also organized campaigns for
Ligne n°132 : legislative abolition and developed a research team which looked into ...
Ligne n°132 : ... legislative abolition and developed a research team which looked into- Ligne n°133 : empirical evidence surrounding issues such as death penalty deterrence
Ligne n°134 : and racial discrimination within the capital punishment process. ...
Ligne n°133 : ... empirical evidence surrounding issues such as death penalty deterrence- Ligne n°134 : and racial discrimination within the capital punishment process.
Ligne n°135 : Although the organization had little success when it came to abolition, ...
Ligne n°150 : ... 1930s. The decline in executions gave strength to various new- Ligne n°151 : anti-capital punishment organizations. Among these groups were: a
Ligne n°152 : California-based Citizens Against Legalized Murder, the Ohio Committee ...
Ligne n°152 : ... California-based Citizens Against Legalized Murder, the Ohio Committee- Ligne n°153 : to Abolish Capital Punishment, the New Jersey Council to Abolish
Ligne n°154 : Capital Punishment, California’s People Against Capital Punishment, the ...
Ligne n°153 : ... to Abolish Capital Punishment, the New Jersey Council to Abolish- Ligne n°154 : Capital Punishment, California’s People Against Capital Punishment, the
- Ligne n°154 : Capital Punishment, California’s People Against Capital Punishment, the
Ligne n°155 : New York Committee to Abolish Capital Punishment, the Oregon Council to ...
Ligne n°154 : ... Capital Punishment, California’s People Against Capital Punishment, the- Ligne n°155 : New York Committee to Abolish Capital Punishment, the Oregon Council to
Ligne n°156 : Abolish the Death Penalty, and the national Committee to Abolish the ...
Ligne n°155 : ... New York Committee to Abolish Capital Punishment, the Oregon Council to- Ligne n°156 : Abolish the Death Penalty, and the national Committee to Abolish the
Ligne n°157 : Federal Death Penalty. In addition to growing organizations, the ...
Ligne n°156 : ... Abolish the Death Penalty, and the national Committee to Abolish the- Ligne n°157 : Federal Death Penalty. In addition to growing organizations, the
Ligne n°158 : movement also profited from growing European abolishment of the death ...
Ligne n°160 : ... Caryl Chessman. Success mounted in the late 1950s as Alaska, Hawaii,- Ligne n°161 : and Delaware abolished capital punishment. Oregon and Iowa followed
Ligne n°162 : their leads in the 1960s. Many other states added laws that restricted ...
Ligne n°162 : ... their leads in the 1960s. Many other states added laws that restricted- Ligne n°163 : the use of the death penalty except in cases of extreme serious
Ligne n°164 : offenses. Abolitionists began to strongly challenge the ...
Ligne n°164 : ... offenses. Abolitionists began to strongly challenge the- Ligne n°165 : constitutionality of the death penalty in the 1960s. Lawyers from the
Ligne n°166 : American Civil Liberties Union and from the NAACP Legal Defense and ...
Ligne n°169 : ... executions while it was in process. The United States executed zero- Ligne n°170 : people from 1968 to 1976. The Anti-Death Penalty’s biggest victory of
Ligne n°171 : this time period was the Supreme Court Case, Furman v. Georgia, of ...
Ligne n°171 : ... this time period was the Supreme Court Case, Furman v. Georgia, of- Ligne n°172 : 1972. The Supreme Court found the current state of the death penalty
Ligne n°173 : unconstitutional due to its “arbitrary and discriminatory manner” of ...
Ligne n°175 : ... revamp their laws and make them more constitutional. Twenty eight- Ligne n°176 : states did just that and the court eventually allowed the death penalty
Ligne n°177 : again through a series of cases in 1976. ...- Ligne n°179 : Contemporary anti-death penalty movement[edit]
- Ligne n°181 : The anti-death penalty movement slowly rose again after a brief moment
Ligne n°182 : of rest due to the reinstatement of capital punishment in many states. ...
Ligne n°181 : ... The anti-death penalty movement slowly rose again after a brief moment- Ligne n°182 : of rest due to the reinstatement of capital punishment in many states.
Ligne n°183 : This time, however, the movement sprung in the form of a wide range or ...
Ligne n°185 : ... of the most influential organizations who continue to work against- Ligne n°186 : capital punishment today include Amnesty International USA, the
Ligne n°187 : American Civil Liberties Union, the NAACP Legal Defense and Education ...
Ligne n°187 : ... American Civil Liberties Union, the NAACP Legal Defense and Education- Ligne n°188 : Fund, and the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty. The
Ligne n°189 : works of these organizations have brought about various restrictions on ...
Ligne n°189 : ... works of these organizations have brought about various restrictions on- Ligne n°190 : the use of capital punishment. Juveniles and the mentally ill or
Ligne n°191 : retarded can no longer be executed.^[8] In addition, the Supreme Court ...
Ligne n°204 : ... In a poll completed by Gallup in October 2009, 65% of Americans- Ligne n°205 : supported the death penalty for persons convicted of murder, while 31%
Ligne n°206 : were against and 5% did not have an opinion.^[9] ...
Ligne n°209 : ... punishment. An ABC News survey in July 2006 found 65 percent in favour- Ligne n°210 : of capital punishment, consistent with other polling since 2000.^[10]
Ligne n°211 : About half the American public says the death penalty is not imposed ...
Ligne n°210 : ... of capital punishment, consistent with other polling since 2000.^[10]- Ligne n°211 : About half the American public says the death penalty is not imposed
Ligne n°212 : frequently enough and 60 percent believe it is applied fairly, ...
Ligne n°216 : ... offenders.^[12] Roughly six in 10 tell Gallup they do not believe- Ligne n°217 : capital punishment deters murder and majorities believe at least one
Ligne n°218 : innocent person has been executed in the past five years.^[13]^[14] ...
Ligne n°220 : ... As a comparison, in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Latin America, and- Ligne n°221 : Western Europe, the death penalty is a controversial issue.^[15]
Ligne n°222 : However certain cases of mass murder, terrorism, and child murder ...
Ligne n°225 : ... Bali bombings, though none of these events or similar events actually- Ligne n°226 : caused the death penalty to be re-instated. Between 2000 and 2010,
Ligne n°227 : support for the return of capital punishment in Canada dropped from 44% ...
Ligne n°226 : ... caused the death penalty to be re-instated. Between 2000 and 2010,- Ligne n°227 : support for the return of capital punishment in Canada dropped from 44%
Ligne n°228 : to 40%, and opposition to it returning rose from 43% to 46%.^[16] The ...
Ligne n°229 : ... Canadian government currently "has absolutely no plans to reinstate- Ligne n°230 : capital punishment."^[17] Nonetheless, in a 2011 interview given to
Ligne n°231 : Canadian media, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper affirmed his ...
Ligne n°231 : ... Canadian media, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper affirmed his- Ligne n°232 : private support for capital punishment by saying, "I personally think
Ligne n°233 : there are times where capital punishment is appropriate." According to ...
Ligne n°232 : ... private support for capital punishment by saying, "I personally think- Ligne n°233 : there are times where capital punishment is appropriate." According to
Ligne n°234 : some polls, as of 2012, 63% of surveyed Canadians believe the death ...
Ligne n°234 : ... some polls, as of 2012, 63% of surveyed Canadians believe the death- Ligne n°235 : penalty is sometimes appropriate, while 61% said capital punishment is
Ligne n°236 : warranted for murder.^[18] ...
Ligne n°238 : ... A Gallup International poll from 2000 said that "Worldwide support was- Ligne n°239 : expressed in favor of the death penalty, with just more than half (52%)
Ligne n°240 : indicating that they were in favour of this form of punishment." A ...- Ligne n°248 : Capital punishment is often opposed on the grounds that innocent people
Ligne n°249 : will inevitably be executed. Supporters of capital punishment object ...
Ligne n°248 : ... Capital punishment is often opposed on the grounds that innocent people- Ligne n°249 : will inevitably be executed. Supporters of capital punishment object
Ligne n°250 : that these lives have to be weighed against the far more numerous ...- Ligne n°284 : Opponents of capital punishment have argued that the arbitrariness
Ligne n°285 : present in its administration make the practice both immoral and ...
Ligne n°307 : ... In the United States, there has been an evolving debate as to whether- Ligne n°308 : capital punishment should apply to persons with diminished mental
Ligne n°309 : capacity. In Ford v. Wainwright,^[30] the Supreme Court held that the ...
Ligne n°330 : ... One reason that there is no general consensus on whether or not the- Ligne n°331 : death penalty is a deterrent is that it is used so rarely - only about
Ligne n°332 : one out of every 300 murders actually results in an execution. In 2005 ...
Ligne n°334 : ... Yale with a doctorate in economics, and Justin Wolfers, an economist at- Ligne n°335 : the University of Pennsylvania, wrote that the death penalty "... is
Ligne n°336 : applied so rarely that the number of homicides it can plausibly have ...
Ligne n°344 : ... Naci Mocan, an economist at Louisiana State University, authored a- Ligne n°345 : study that looked at all 3,054 U.S. counties over death penalty on lots
Ligne n°346 : of different grounds... But I do believe that people respond to ...
Ligne n°346 : ... of different grounds... But I do believe that people respond to- Ligne n°347 : incentives." Shepherd found that the death penalty had a deterrent
Ligne n°348 : effect only in those states that executed at least nine people between ...- Ligne n°353 : The question of whether or not the death penalty deters murder usually
Ligne n°354 : revolves around the statistical analysis. Studies have produced ...
Ligne n°355 : ... disputed results with disputed significance.^[36] Some studies have- Ligne n°356 : shown a positive correlation between the death penalty and murder
Ligne n°357 : rates^[37] – in other words, they show that where the death penalty ...
Ligne n°356 : ... shown a positive correlation between the death penalty and murder- Ligne n°357 : rates^[37] – in other words, they show that where the death penalty
Ligne n°358 : applies, murder rates are also high. This correlation can be ...
Ligne n°358 : ... applies, murder rates are also high. This correlation can be- Ligne n°359 : interpreted in either that the death penalty increases murder rates by
Ligne n°360 : brutalizing society, or that higher murder rates cause the state to ...
Ligne n°360 : ... brutalizing society, or that higher murder rates cause the state to- Ligne n°361 : retain or reintroduce the death penalty. However, supporters and
Ligne n°362 : opponents of the various statistical studies, on both sides of the ...- Ligne n°365 : The case for a large deterrent effect of capital punishment has been
Ligne n°366 : significantly strengthened since the 1990s, as a wave of sophisticated ...
Ligne n°375 : ... chiefs and others involved in law enforcement may not believe that the- Ligne n°376 : death penalty has any deterrent effect on individuals who commit
Ligne n°377 : violent crimes. In a 1995 poll of randomly selected police chiefs from ...
Ligne n°377 : ... violent crimes. In a 1995 poll of randomly selected police chiefs from- Ligne n°378 : across the U.S., the officers rank the death penalty last as a way of
Ligne n°379 : deterring or preventing violent crimes. They ranked it behind many ...
Ligne n°383 : ... better economy with more jobs would lessen crime rates more than the- Ligne n°384 : death penalty^[39] In fact, only one percent of the police chiefs
Ligne n°385 : surveyed thought that the death penalty was the primary focus for ...
Ligne n°384 : ... death penalty^[39] In fact, only one percent of the police chiefs- Ligne n°385 : surveyed thought that the death penalty was the primary focus for
Ligne n°386 : reducing crime.^[40] ...- Ligne n°399 : But some say the death penalty must be enforced even if the deterrent
Ligne n°400 : effect is unclear, like John McAdams, who teaches political science at ...
Ligne n°426 : ... innocent lives, which gives a life-life tradeoff. "The familiar- Ligne n°427 : problems with capital punishment—potential error, irreversibility,
Ligne n°428 : arbitrariness, and racial skew—do not argue in favor of abolition, ...
Ligne n°434 : ... opinion.^[43] Regarding any attempt to make a utilitarian moral- Ligne n°435 : argument for capital punishment, Albert Camus wrote:
- Ligne n°437 : "Capital punishment is the most premeditated of murders, to
Ligne n°438 : which no criminal’s deed, however calculated, can be compared. ...
Ligne n°438 : ... which no criminal’s deed, however calculated, can be compared.- Ligne n°439 : For there to be an equivalency, the death penalty would have to
Ligne n°440 : punish a criminal who had warned his victim of the date on which ...
Ligne n°455 : ... exclamation is actually low according to a June 2011 study by former- Ligne n°456 : death penalty prosecutor and federal judge Arthur L. Alarcón, and law
Ligne n°457 : professor Paula Mitchell. According to Alarcón and Mitchell, California ...
Ligne n°457 : ... professor Paula Mitchell. According to Alarcón and Mitchell, California- Ligne n°458 : has spent $4 billion on the death penalty since 1978, and death penalty
- Ligne n°458 : has spent $4 billion on the death penalty since 1978, and death penalty
Ligne n°459 : trials are 20 times more expensive than trials seeking a sentence of ...- Ligne n°465 : 1. ^ "Death Penalty". Gallup.
Ligne n°466 : 2. ^ "10 reasons to oppose the death penalty". Death Penalty Focus. ...
Ligne n°465 : ... 1. ^ "Death Penalty". Gallup.- Ligne n°466 : 2. ^ "10 reasons to oppose the death penalty". Death Penalty Focus.
- Ligne n°466 : 2. ^ "10 reasons to oppose the death penalty". Death Penalty Focus.
Ligne n°467 : 3. ^ Lambert, Eric G; Clarke, Alan; Lambert, Janet (2004). "Reasons ...
Ligne n°467 : ... 3. ^ Lambert, Eric G; Clarke, Alan; Lambert, Janet (2004). "Reasons- Ligne n°468 : for Supporting and Opposing Capital Punishment in the USA: A
Ligne n°469 : Preliminary Study". Internet Journal of Criminology. ...
Ligne n°469 : ... Preliminary Study". Internet Journal of Criminology.- Ligne n°470 : 4. ^ The death penalty: abolition in Europe. Council of Europe. 1999.
Ligne n°471 : p. 105. ISBN 9789287138743. ...
Ligne n°472 : ... 5. ^ ^a ^b ^c ^d ^e Haines, Herbert H (1996). Against Capital- Ligne n°473 : Punishment: Anti-Death Penalty Movement in America, 1972-1994.
Ligne n°474 : Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195088380. ...
Ligne n°479 : ... (2): 55–56. JSTOR 27502415.- Ligne n°480 : 8. ^ ^a ^b "Part I: History of the Death Penalty". Death Penalty
- Ligne n°480 : 8. ^ ^a ^b "Part I: History of the Death Penalty". Death Penalty
Ligne n°481 : Information Center. ...
Ligne n°481 : ... Information Center.- Ligne n°482 : 9. ^ "2008 Gallup Death Penalty Poll". Gallup.com. Retrieved
Ligne n°483 : 2012-12-12. ...
Ligne n°483 : ... 2012-12-12.- Ligne n°484 : 10. ^ ""Capital Punishment, 30 Years On: Support, but Ambivalence as
Ligne n°485 : Well" (PDF, 1 July 2006)" (PDF). Retrieved 2012-12-12. ...
Ligne n°486 : ... 11. ^ "Crime". Pollingreport.com. Retrieved 2012-12-12.- Ligne n°487 : 12. ^ "Two-thirds of Americans say they favor the death penalty for
Ligne n°488 : murderers, but when given the choice of life without parole, ...
Ligne n°489 : ... support falls to half". Publicagenda.org. Retrieved 30 April 2012.- Ligne n°490 : 13. ^ "Six in 10 Americans say the death penalty does not act as a
Ligne n°491 : deterrent to murder". Publicagenda.org. Retrieved 30 April 2012. ...
Ligne n°491 : ... deterrent to murder". Publicagenda.org. Retrieved 30 April 2012.- Ligne n°492 : 14. ^ "Half of Americans say the death penalty is not imposed enough,
Ligne n°493 : but most believe that at least one innocent person has been ...
Ligne n°495 : ... Retrieved 30 April 2012.- Ligne n°496 : 15. ^ Death penalty information center "International Polls and
Ligne n°497 : Studies". Retrieved 2010-05-30.[1] Majority of Britons want death ...
Ligne n°498 : ... penalty restored: poll- Ligne n°499 : 16. ^ "Canadians split on pot, death penalty: poll". CBC News. 18 March
Ligne n°500 : 2010. ...
Ligne n°501 : ... 17. ^ The Canadian Press (18 January 2011). "Harper says he personally- Ligne n°502 : favours death penalty but won't reinstate it". 680News. Retrieved
Ligne n°503 : 30 April 2012. ...
Ligne n°504 : ... 18. ^ Tasha Kheiriddin: Tori Stafford case shows why Canada needs the- Ligne n°505 : death penalty Accessed March 2012: "Prior to the 2011 election,
Ligne n°506 : when asked about the subject in an interview by the CBC’s Peter ...
Ligne n°507 : ... Mansbridge, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said, 'I personally think- Ligne n°508 : there are times where capital punishment is appropriate.'" "So how
Ligne n°509 : do Canadians feel about the death penalty? Shortly after the Prime ...
Ligne n°508 : ... there are times where capital punishment is appropriate.'" "So how- Ligne n°509 : do Canadians feel about the death penalty? Shortly after the Prime
Ligne n°510 : Minister’s interview, Abacus Data published a study finding that ...
Ligne n°510 : ... Minister’s interview, Abacus Data published a study finding that- Ligne n°511 : 66% of Canadians support the death penalty “in certain
Ligne n°512 : circumstances.” An Environics poll published in February 2012, ...
Ligne n°512 : ... circumstances.” An Environics poll published in February 2012,- Ligne n°513 : affirmed that 63% of those surveyed believe the death penalty is
Ligne n°514 : sometimes appropriate, while 61% said capital punishment is ...
Ligne n°513 : ... affirmed that 63% of those surveyed believe the death penalty is- Ligne n°514 : sometimes appropriate, while 61% said capital punishment is
Ligne n°515 : warranted for murder." ...
Ligne n°515 : ... warranted for murder."- Ligne n°516 : 19. ^ Cass R. Sunstein and Adrian Vermeule: Is Capital Punishment
Ligne n°517 : Morally Required? The Relevance of Life-Life Tradeoffs U Chicago ...
Ligne n°520 : ... 85, March 2005.- Ligne n°521 : 20. ^ Death Penalty Information Center, Innocence and the Death Penalty
- Ligne n°521 : 20. ^ Death Penalty Information Center, Innocence and the Death Penalty
Ligne n°522 : 21. ^ DPIC Innocence Critique ...
Ligne n°526 : ... 24. ^ Arson Experts Testify in Willingham Investigation- Ligne n°527 : 25. ^ Barbara McCuen, "Does DNA Technology Warrant a Death Penalty
Ligne n°528 : Moratorium?" (May 2000) ...
Ligne n°529 : ... 26. ^ Londono, O. (2013), A Retributive Critique of Racial Bias and- Ligne n°530 : Arbitrariness in Capital Punishment. Journal of Social Philosophy,
Ligne n°531 : 44: 95–105. doi: 10.1111/josp.12013 ...
Ligne n°533 : ... continuing role of race in capital cases. | Amnesty International- Ligne n°534 : 28. ^ Fisher, Marc (8 March 2009). "Delegate's Stance On Death Penalty
Ligne n°535 : Informed by Tragedy". The Washington Post. ...
Ligne n°535 : ... Informed by Tragedy". The Washington Post.- Ligne n°536 : 29. ^ "Death penalty for female offenders, January 1, 1973, through
Ligne n°537 : October 31st, 2010". Retrieved 2011-12-22. ...
Ligne n°545 : ... minute reprieve refused". BSkyB. Retrieved 23 February 2011.- Ligne n°546 : 35. ^ ^a ^b Does Death Penalty Save Lives? A New Debate, New York
Ligne n°547 : Times, November 18, 2007 ...
Ligne n°547 : ... Times, November 18, 2007- Ligne n°548 : 36. ^ Death Penalty Information Center, Facts about Deterrence and the
Ligne n°549 : Death Penalty ...
Ligne n°548 : ... 36. ^ Death Penalty Information Center, Facts about Deterrence and the- Ligne n°549 : Death Penalty
Ligne n°550 : 37. ^ Joanna M. Shepherd, Capital Punishment and the Deterrence of ...
Ligne n°549 : ... Death Penalty- Ligne n°550 : 37. ^ Joanna M. Shepherd, Capital Punishment and the Deterrence of
Ligne n°551 : Crime (Written Testimony for the House Judiciary Committee, ...
Ligne n°553 : ... 2004.)- Ligne n°554 : 38. ^ Death Penalty Information Center, Discussion of Recent Deterrence
Ligne n°555 : Studies ...
Ligne n°555 : ... Studies- Ligne n°556 : 39. ^ Deiter, Richard. "The Death Penalty is not an Effective Law
Ligne n°557 : Enforcement Tool,” in Stephen E. Schonebaum (Ed.): Does Capital ...
Ligne n°559 : ... 1998- Ligne n°560 : 40. ^ Deiter, Richard. "The Death Penalty is not an Effective Law
Ligne n°561 : Enforcement Tool,” in Stephen E. Schonebaum (Ed.): Does Capital ...
Ligne n°576 : ... to Mend or End the California Legislature's Multi-Billion-Dollar- Ligne n°577 : Death Penalty Debacle".
Ligne n°578 : 47. ^ http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/costs-death-penalty ...
Ligne n°588 : ... Categories:- Ligne n°589 : * Capital punishment in the United States