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Moving away from the death penalty : arguments, trends and perspectives / editor: Ivan Šimonović.

By: United Nations. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.
Contributor(s): Šimonović, Ivan [editor].
Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : United Nations, 2014Description: 297 páginas : ilustraciones.Subject(s): Pena de muerteDDC classification: 345.0773 U58m
Contents:
• Preface – Ban Ki-moon, UN Secretary-General • Introduction – An Abolitionist’s Perspective, Ivan Šimonovi´c Chapter 1 – Wrongful Convictions • Kirk Bloodsworth, Without DNA evidence I’d still be behind bars • Brandon Garrett, DNA evidence casts light on flaws in system • Gil Garcetti, In the United States, growing doubts about the death penalty • Saul Lehrfreund, Wrongful convictions and miscarriages of justice in death penalty trials in the Caribbean, Africa and Asia Chapter 2 – Myth of Deterrence • Carolyn Hoyle & Roger Hood, Deterrence and public opinion Chapter 3 – Discrimination • Damien Echols, The terrors of prison fade slowly • Stephen Braga, Damien Echols and the West Memphis Three Case • Steve Bright, Imposition of the death penalty upon the poor, racial minorities, the intellectually disabled and the mentally ill • Arif Bulkan, The death penalty in the Commonwealth Carribean: Justice out of reach? • Usha Ramanathan, The death penalty in India: Down a slippery slope • Alice Mogwe, The death penalty in Botswana: Barriers to equal justice • Innocent Maja,The death penalty in Zimbabwe: Legal ambiguitites Chapter 4 – Values p.169 • Mario Marazziti, World religions and the death penalty • Paul Bhatti, Towards a moratorium on the death penalty Chapter 5 – Trends and Perspectives • Salil Shetty, Global death penalty trends since 2012 • Federico Mayor, Leadership and the abolition of the death penalty

• Preface – Ban Ki-moon, UN Secretary-General
• Introduction – An Abolitionist’s Perspective, Ivan Šimonovi´c
Chapter 1 – Wrongful Convictions
• Kirk Bloodsworth, Without DNA evidence I’d still be behind bars
• Brandon Garrett, DNA evidence casts light on flaws in system
• Gil Garcetti, In the United States, growing doubts about the death penalty
• Saul Lehrfreund, Wrongful convictions and miscarriages of justice
in death penalty trials in the Caribbean, Africa and Asia
Chapter 2 – Myth of Deterrence
• Carolyn Hoyle & Roger Hood, Deterrence and public opinion
Chapter 3 – Discrimination
• Damien Echols, The terrors of prison fade slowly
• Stephen Braga, Damien Echols and the West Memphis Three Case
• Steve Bright, Imposition of the death penalty upon the poor, racial minorities, the intellectually disabled and the mentally ill
• Arif Bulkan, The death penalty in the Commonwealth Carribean: Justice out of reach?
• Usha Ramanathan, The death penalty in India: Down a slippery slope
• Alice Mogwe, The death penalty in Botswana: Barriers to equal justice
• Innocent Maja,The death penalty in Zimbabwe: Legal ambiguitites
Chapter 4 – Values p.169
• Mario Marazziti, World religions and the death penalty
• Paul Bhatti, Towards a moratorium on the death penalty
Chapter 5 – Trends and Perspectives
• Salil Shetty, Global death penalty trends since 2012
• Federico Mayor, Leadership and the abolition of the death penalty

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