Why does the United States continue to employ the death penalty when fifty other developed democracies have
abolished it? Why does capital punishment become more problematic each year? How can the death penalty conflict
be resolved? In The Contradictions of American Capital Punishment, Frank Zimring reveals that the seemingly insoluble
turmoil surrounding the death penalty reflects a deep and longstanding division in American values, a division
that he predicts will soon bring about the end of capital punishment in our country. On the one hand, execution
would seem to violate our nation's highest legal principles of fairness and due process. It sets us increasingly
apart from our allies and indeed is regarded by European nations as a barbaric and particularly egregious form
of American exceptionalism. On the other hand, the death penalty represents a deeply held American belief in violent
social justice that sees the hangman as an agent of local control and safeguard of community values. Zimring uncovers
the most troubling symptom of this attraction to vigilante justice in the lynch mob. He shows that the great majority
of executions in recent decades have occurred in precisely those Southern states where lynchings were most common
a hundred years ago. It is this legacy, Zimring suggests, that constitutes both the distinctive appeal of the death
penalty in the United States and one of the most compelling reasons for abolishing it. Imprecably researched and
engagingly written, The Contradictions of American Capital Punishment casts a clear new light on America's long
and troubled embrace of the death penalty.
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
I Divergent Trends
1 The Peculiar Present of American Capital Punishment
2 More Than a Trend: Abolition in the Developed Nations
3 The Symbolic Transformation of American Capital Punishment
II Explaining the American Difference
4 Federalism and Its Discontents
5 The Vigilante Tradition and Modern Executions
6 The Consequences of Contradictory Values
III Capital Punishment in the American Future
7 The No-Win 1990s
8 The Beginning of the End
App. A Statistical Materials on Lynchings and Executions
App. B Reported Frequencies of National Death Penalty Policy, 1980 to 2001
App. C Death Row and Execution Statistics
App. D New Survey Analysis Materials
App. E Justified Killings by Citizens and Police, by State
App. F Review of Death Penalty Exoneration Data from the Death Penalty Information Center
References
Index