This book is an in-depth critical examination of all pertinent aspects of life without parole (LWOP). Empirically assessing key arguments that advance LWOP, including as an alternative to the death penalty, it reveals that not only is the punishment cruel while not providing any societal benefits, it is actually detrimental to society.
Auteur
Ross Kleinstuber is an Associate Professor of Justice Administration & Criminology at the University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown. His research focuses on the intersection of law and society, capital punishment, life without parole, mass incarceration, racial inequality in the justice system, and human rights abuses.
Jeremiah Coldsmith holds a PhD in sociology. His individual research focuses on the intersection of identity and stratification, and as a methodologist and statistician, he has an active research, in collaboration with Dr. Kleinstuber, that focuses on quantifying LWOP's effects on violent crime rates.
Margaret E. Leigey is a Professor and Chair of Criminology at The College of New Jersey. Her research explores the experiences of those serving life without parole, in particular aging individuals, those who were sentenced as juveniles, and women.
Sandra Joy a Professor of Sociology at Rowan University, licensed clinical social worker, mental health clinician, and activist in the movement to abolish capital punishment and LWOP. Her research explores the grief and loss issues confronting the families of those on death row, life without parole, and coalition politics in the anti-death penalty movement.
Contenu
Acknowledgements
List of Figures
List of Tables
Introduction: Meet the New Death Penalty: Life Without Parole
References
Part I: Examining the Abolitionist Case for LWOP
The Phenomenon of Death Row "Volunteers"
The Perspective of the Non-Volunteers
The Experience of Being Resentenced from Death to LWOP
Conclusion
References
Execution and "Execution by Installment": Perceptions of Those Serving Informal and Formal Death Sentences
On "Being Dead While You're Still Alive": A Study of California's Recent Propositions to Abolish the Death Penalty
The Pains of Permanent Imprisonment: Quantitative and Qualitative Findings
"An Inescapable Burden": Maturation and Change Under Permanent Punishment
"An Invisible Entity:" The Experiences of Women Perpetually Incarcerated
Conclusion: Life Without Parole "Picks You Apart"
References
By the Numbers
LWOP and Human Rights Worldwide
Final Thoughts
References
Super Due Process, Life, and Death
Super Due Process and Innocence
Methodological Appendix
References
Conclusion
Yes, Death Sentences Cost More Than Life Sentences
But Those Costs Save Lives
And There Are More Life Sentences
Summary
References
The Death Penalty is Racial Control and LWOP is the Death Penalty
LWOP Targets the Disadvantaged
Juvenile LWOP
Conclusion: A War on Which Crimes?
References
Part II: Examining the "Tough-On-Crime" Case for LWOP
Enactment of LWOP Statutes and Violent Crime
The Effect of Using LWOP More Frequently on Violent Crime
Conclusion
Methodological Appendix
References
LWOP Violates the Core Principles of Retribution
Retribution Does Not Benefit Most Victims
Conclusion
References
The Subjects
Early Days in Prison
Maturation, the Influence of their Elders, and the Road to Redemption
Finding Redemption and Giving Back
Conclusion
References
Conclusion & Recommendations
Policy Recommendations
References Index