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Against Capital Punishment
: The Anti-Death Penalty Movement in America, 1972-1994 Herbert
H. Haines

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bn.com Price: $15.96
Retail Price: $19.95 You Save: $3.99 (20%)
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24 hours Format:
Paperback, 288pp. ISBN:
0195132491 Publisher: Oxford University Press,
Incorporated Pub. Date: August 1999


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 ABOUT THE
BOOK
Synopsis This is an "account of the
history of the anti-death penalty movement (ADPM) since 1972, and . . .
{an} analysis of its strategic and tactical strengths and weaknesses, and
a . . . set of proposals for reframing the ADPM's arguments to win more
public and political support against capital punishment." (Contemp Sociol)
Index.
From The
Publisher While most western democracies have renounced the death penalty,
capital punishment enjoys vast and growing support in the United States. A
significant and vocal minority, however, continues to oppose it. Against
Capital Punishment is the first full account of anti-death penalty
activism in America during the years since the ten-year moratorium on
executions ended. Building on in-depth interviews with movement leaders
and the records of key abolitionist organizations, this work traces the
struggle against the pro-death penalty backlash that has steadily gained
momentum since the 1970s. It reviews the conservative turn in the courts
which, over the last two decades, has forced death penalty opponents to
rely less on the litigation strategies that once served them well. It
describes their efforts to mount a broad-based educational and political
assault on what they see as the most cruel, racist, ineffective, and
expensive manifestation of a criminal justice system gone wrong. Despite
the efforts of death-penalty opponents, executions in the United States
are on the increase. Against Capital Punishment diagnoses the reasons for
the failure to mobilize widespread opposition to executions, and assesses
the prospects for opposition to capital punishment in the future of the
United States.
Reviews From Steven E. Barkan -
Contemporary Sociology Haines's book succeeds on
several levels. It tells us about as much as we would want to know about
the history of the recent ADPM and uses social movement theoretical
emphases to trace its development, dynamics, success, and failure. It is
more of a social movement case study than an extension of social movement
theory, but no less valuable for that, for it is a model of clear writing
and of the application of sociological theory to one of the most important
social and political problems of our times. From Ed Walsh - American Journal of Sociology
This carefully researched and thorough account of anti-death
penalty activism in the United States over the past 25 years will be
valuable in a variety of traditional graduate and upper-level
undergraduate courses including criminal justice and criminology, social
movements, and political sociology. For more interdisciplinary courses, it
might be mined for useful insights on interaction processes among
professional movements, the political economy, the criminal justice
system, and public opinion. From Dennis D. Dorin Sociologist Herbert Haines
has attempted to apply "social constructionist theories of social
problems" and "social movement analysis" to America's anti-death penalty
activism, especially of the post-1972 years. His primary focus is the
behavior of the Legal Defense Fund, the America Civil Liberties Union,
Amnesty International USA and the National Coalition to Abolish the Death
Penalty--poorly funded organizations drawing primarily upon a narrow band
of white, liberal, middle-class professionals as they largely
unsuccessfully battle against the wave of capital punishment engulfing
American society. The centerpiece of Haines's data is comprised of
interviews with fifty or so of the leading figures in the anti-capital
punishment movement, as well as 5,000 pages of documents from their
colleagues' and their files. For Haines, there are four "abolitionist
eras" in American history. Of the two most recent, the third was dominated
by the movement's litigators and more or less reached its crescendo with
FURMAN V. GEORGIA (1972), whose demand for an elevated level of due
process in capital cases led, during a four-year period, to the
invalidation of every death penalty statute in the country. But the
leitmotif of the present fourth is that the days of sweeping legal
victories are largely over. For, from the early stages of Ronald Reagan's
presidency, the federal courts could no longer be counted upon
significantly to limit the application of capital sanctions. Thereby
denied its previously most powerful weapon, its path breaking litigation,
how has the movement responded? In the context of a present-day violent,
angry, and frightened America, Haines tells us, its moral arguments, which
have tended to dominate its message, have generally fallen upon deaf ears.
It has failed appreciably to mobilize potential supporters among religious
groups, students, and African-Americans. Its state and local base is
feeble. It has had nothing of the street presence that could dramatically
bring its case to large numbers of Americans. And lacking such a public
spotlight, it has seen its message massively distorted by the media and
its opponents. A hopeless situation? If the movement remains largely as it
is, Haines argues, it can do only two things. First, with very rare
victories, it can try to make it legislatively and judicially difficult to
inflict death penalties. Second, it can, at least, help to keep
abolitionism alive. However, he continues, in the long run, it might even
attain abolition itself if it can "reframe" its case to the public. Rather
than try to sidestep Americans' well-founded anxieties about violent
crime, Haines argues, abolitionists should make appeals that respond
directly to them. First, they should dramatize just how dysfunctional
capital punishment is. No valid study, he contends, has shown that death
is superior to imprisonment in deterring illegal homicides. And every
careful assessment of the costs of executions shows that they are
massively greater than those incurred in life incarcerations. In addition,
this outlay rests far more substantially upon trial court expenses - ones
relatively immune to change - than on the highly sensationalized ones of
successive appeals. Second, Haines observes, polls show overwhelmingly
that, when given the option of life without the possibility of parole, and
especially with restitution to the victims' families, very large numbers
of Americans are willing to abandon their support for the death penalty.
In such a context, then, there is "a window of opportunity" for
abolitionists powerfully to argue that the elimination of capital
punishment will produce a substantial funding "dividend" that can then be
employed, in a time of ever more constricted federal and state budgets, in
far more effective attacks upon violent criminality. Yet, Haines
concludes, given their ideologies, traditions, and structures, the ACLU,
Amnesty International USA, and the National Coalition to Abolish the Death
Penalty will probably find it impossible to "repackage" their messages
along the lines he has advocated. Consequently, wholly new abolitionist
organizations may have to be created - ones capable of building bridges to
moderate, and even conservative, counterparts in law enforcement, victims'
rights groups, legislatures, and similar institutions. A fascinating
thesis! And one presented persuasively. Haines makes no pretense of
objectivity; he is a dedicated abolitionist. Yet, he does not appear so
much a part of the movement that he glosses over questionable positions of
brothers and sisters. More than any such study of which I am familiar, his
illuminates vividly the inner tensions and battles among abolitionists
and, at key junctures, explicitly and forcefully takes sides. Who should
call the shots, litigators or activists? Have individuals like the
Reverend Joseph Ingle, an often publicized spiritual advisor to Death Row
inmates, gone too far in seeking to "humanize" them through the media? Has
Sister Helen Prejean provided a far more balanced, and thereby attractive,
alternative? Does it really make sense for large sectors of the movement
not to oppose, openly, abolitionists like Ingle when they denounce life
imprisonment as merely a drawn-out death sentence? In taking on such
question, Haines seems the strategist first and the social scientist
second. He develops little new theory. Social science concepts appear
almost to flit in and out of his analysis. Testing them does not seem the
focal point of his inquiry. They are more like handmaidens to the
development of his policy stands. Yet, given his objectives, such emphases
are hardly weaknesses. Haines, the sociologist, almost always keeps
Haines, the abolitionist, on firm empirical ground. Obviously, any work so
comprehensive and bold raises a number of questions. Did the movement that
led to statutory gradations of murder and manslaughter really spring more
or less solely from an attempt to counter jury nullification? Or did it
also have its humanitarian motivations? One would think that this question
would be especially significant for a Haines, who is attempting to promote
his own coalition of liberal and conservative anti-crime forces. Is there
even threshold evidence that Death Row media figures Roger Coleman and
Leonel Herrera may well have been innocent? Or was the case against them -
a massive amount of which was never fully reported to the public -
overwhelming? Should a serious Supreme Court researcher rely on Bob
Woodward's and Scott Armstrong's THE BRETHREN for his or her accounts of
what the Justices said behind-the-scenes relating to cases like FURMAN? Or
do studies of published materials, as well as ones now based upon the
recently opened Thurgood Marshall Papers, show Woodward's and Armstrong's
widely circulated book to be riddled with errors? Most importantly, Haines
may have underestimated the continuing role of the litigators. The ink was
barely dry on GREGG V. GEORGIA (1976), which approved the reimposition of
the death penalty, when they began their new drive to "whipsaw" states
attempting to bring back executions. Anthony Amsterdam, the main architect
of their strategy, told them at a 1977 conference that, if a statute
contained any appreciable vagueness, they would attack it, under the
Furman and Gregg Cases, as granting prosecutors and jurors a
constitutionally impermissible, because still "untrammeled," discretion.
And if it were explicit, Amsterdam added, they would still condemn it,
again under GREGG, this time, as unconstitutionally preventing
individualized sentencing! This approach, as Haines notes, led to 14
victories out of the first 15 fully considered post-GREGG United States
Supreme Court capital cases. And, although it may have taken a hammering
since the early 1980's, it remains very much alive. It can still lead to
the invalidation of large numbers of a state's death sentences, as it did
in North Carolina via the Dock McKoy Case (1990). As Haines demonstrates
vividly, it also came only one vote short on the Supreme Court, in
MCCLESKEY V. KEMP (1987), of invalidating, as racially discriminatory,
Georgia's entire capital punishment system. Moreover, contrary to Haines's
and a number of other commentators' interpretations, MCCLESKEY did not bar
all future statistically-based racial-discrimination-in-capital-sentencing
claims. My research into the Thurgood Marshall Papers, for example, shows
that Justice Scalia wanted MCCLESKEY's author, Justice Powell, to so hold.
But Powell refused to do so (Dorin 1994, 1065-1066). And just last term,
the Court encouraged more, not less, such data, in the context of possibly
racially discriminatory capital sentencing, in UNITED STATES V. ARMSTRONG
(1996). In addition, on the horizon is a series of new social science
studies stemming from the Capital Jury Project which suggest, most
disturbingly, that the most basic assumptions of the GREGG Court about how
legal procedures would induce jurors to approach fairness in their death
sentencing may be unfounded (see, e.g., "Symposium: The Capital Jury
Project" 1995). Can there be any question that ingenious movement
attorneys will soon devise means by which these findings will be blended
into pending litigation? How will such works fare before a Rehnquist
bench? Jack Boger, who argued MCCLESKEY at the Supreme Court level, has
noted that abolitionist lawyers tend to be incorrigible optimists. Is it
so far-fetched, they will reason, that a Stevens, Souter, Ginsburg, or
Breyer might find them compelling? Even Thomas went out of his way, in a
recent case, to brand the previously outlawed capital rape sanction as
racially discriminatory. Might he not be concerned with these studies'
implications for African-Americans? And how about a Kennedy who, in
personal conversations, can expound, sharply, just about every one of
Haines's anti-death penalty arguments (Dorin 1996)? Suppose he now
believes that only retributivist concerns can justify death sentences? How
might he react if the Capital Jury Project findings show, persuasively,
that many jurors actually make their decisions on death and retribution
long before they collectively and systematically even consider the
aggravating and mitigating circumstances that GREGG assumed would govern
them in such determinations? Will there even be a Rehnquist Court for very
long, these litigators are no doubt wondering, if Bill Clinton is
reelected? And could a Clinton, with or without a Democratic Senate, maybe
even successfully appoint to the High Bench such an articulate and
committed abolitionist as his Solicitor General-designate, Walter
Dellinger? So, should Haines start thinking about a fifth abolitionist era
- given how, with the judicial branch, even a relatively small turnover at
the highest level can soon have very far-reaching consequences? If the
answer proves to be "yes," we have every reason to believe that Haines,
cum social scientist, will provide Haines, social reformer, with yet
another round of clear, commonsense, and empirically grounded
perspectives. References Dennis D. Dorin, "Far Right of the Mainstream:
Racism, Rights, and Remedies From the Perspective of Justice Antonin
Scalia's MCCLESKEY Memorandum," MERCER LAW REVIEW, 45, 3 (Spring, 199),
1035-1088. Dennis D. Dorin, UNC-Charlotte Pre-Law Society Seminar with
Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, U.S. Supreme Court, Washington, D.C., May 9,
1996. "Symposium: The Capital Jury Project," INDIANA LAW JOURNAL, 70, 4
(Fall, 1995), 1033-1270.
 FROM THE BOOK
Table of Contents
|
Introduction: Death Penalty Abolitionism in
America |
3 |
| 1 |
The Fall and Rise of Capital Punishment:
1965-1976 |
23 |
| 2 |
The Return of the Executioner: 1976-1982 |
55 |
| 3 |
The Reemergence of Political Abolitionism |
73 |
| 4 |
Framing Disputes in the Movement Against Capital
Punishment |
117 |
| 5 |
Abolitionism at the Crossroads |
148 |
| 6 |
Reframing Capital Punishment: Pragmatic
Abolitionism |
167 |
|
Notes |
197 |
|
References |
221 |
|
Index |
239 |
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