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BestsellerE-book
Author Sarat, Austin, author.

Title Lethal injection and the false promise of humane execution / Austin Sarat ; with Mattea Denney, Greene Ko, Nicolas Graber-Mitchell, Rose Mroczka, Lauren Pelosi.

Publication Info. Stanford, California : Stanford Briefs, an imprint of Stanford University Press, [2022]

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (xii, 179 pages) : illustrations, map
text file
Contents One week in the world of lethal injection -- The origins of lethal injection -- The collapse of the original paradigm -- A decade of mishaps -- State responses -- Failure, reform, and the future.
Summary With a history marked by incompetence, political maneuvering, and secrecy, America's "most humane" execution method is anything but. From the beginning of the Republic, this country has struggled to reconcile its use of capital punishment with the Constitution's prohibition of cruel punishment. Death penalty proponents argue both that it is justifiable as a response to particularly heinous crimes, and that it serves to deter others from committing them in the future. However, since the earliest executions, abolitionists have fought against this state-sanctioned killing, arguing, among other things, that the methods of execution have frequently been just as gruesome as the crimes meriting their use. Lethal injection was first introduced in order to quell such objections, but, as Austin Sarat shows in this brief history, its supporters' commitment to painless and humane death has never been certain. This book tells the story of lethal injection's earliest iterations in the United States, starting with New York state's rejection of that execution method almost a century and half ago. Sarat recounts lethal injection's return in the late 1970s, and offers novel and insightful scrutiny of the new drug protocols that went into effect between 2010 and 2020. Drawing on rare data, he makes the case that lethal injections during this time only became more unreliable, inefficient, and more frequently botched. Beyond his stirring narrative history, Sarat mounts a comprehensive condemnation of the state-level maneuvering in response to such mishaps, whereby death penalty states adopted secrecy statutes and adjusted their execution protocols to make it harder to identify and observe lethal injection's flaws. What was once touted as America's most humane execution method is now its most unreliable one. What was once a model of efficiency in the grim business of state killing is now marked by mayhem. The book concludes by critically examining the place of lethal injection, and the death penalty writ large, today.
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Subject Lethal injection (Execution) -- United States -- History.
Lethal injection (Execution)
United States.
Capital punishment -- United States -- History.
Capital punishment.
History.
LAW / Legal History.
Genre/Form History.
Added Author Denney, Mattea, contributor.
Ko, Greene, contributor.
Graber-Mitchell, Nicolas, contributor.
Mroczka, Rose, contributor.
Pelosi, Lauren, contributor.
Other Form: Original 9781503633537 1503633535 (DLC) 2022935885 (OCoLC)1309021950
ISBN 9781503634510 (electronic book)
1503634515 (electronic book)
9781503633537
1503633535