Capital Punishment: Race, Pove.. - YaleCourses

          5/40 Videos
3
Death Penalty History (s1c)
YaleCourses
00:22:46
6
The Court's 1976 Cases (s2b)
YaleCourses
00:41:30
7
Proportionality – Part I (s3a)
YaleCourses
00:18:39
8
Proportionality – Part II (s3b)
YaleCourses
00:27:07
9
Aggravating Factors (s3c)
YaleCourses
00:22:02
10
Future Dangerousness (s3d)
YaleCourses
00:23:13
11
Mitigation (s4a)
YaleCourses
00:22:29
12
Interview of Susan Marcus (s4b)
YaleCourses
00:21:09
13
Victim Impact Evidence (s4c)
YaleCourses
00:19:10
16
Prosecutorial Discretion (s6a)
YaleCourses
00:26:46
17
Plea Bargaining (s6b)
YaleCourses
00:23:25
18
Disclosure (s6c)
YaleCourses
00:19:59
19
Interview of John Thompson (s6d)
YaleCourses
00:34:24
21
Effective Assistance of Counsel (s7b)
23
Interview of Derwyn Bunton (s7d)
YaleCourses
00:16:44
24
Interview of Steven Singer (s7e)
YaleCourses
00:36:35
25
The Right to an Impartial Judge (s8a)
26
Interview of Penny White (s8b)
YaleCourses
00:18:36
27
Jury Selection (s9a)
YaleCourses
00:41:43
28
Peremptory Strikes (s9b)
YaleCourses
00:32:54
29
Interview of Sia Sanneh (s9c)
YaleCourses
00:33:16
30
Interview of Marla Sandys (s9d)
YaleCourses
00:22:37
31
McCleskey v. Kemp (s10a)
YaleCourses
00:37:03
32
Guest Lecture by Bryan Stevenson (s10b)
34
Interview of William Neal Moore (s11a)
35
Mental Health Issues (s12a)
YaleCourses
00:36:57
36
Competency After Death Imposed (s12b)
37
Innocence (s13a)
YaleCourses
00:28:53
38
Clemency (s13b)
YaleCourses
00:21:52
39
Execution (s13c)
YaleCourses
00:12:15
40
Perspectives (s13d)
YaleCourses
00:17:49

Challenges to the Death Penalty Leading to it Being Declared Unconstitutional (s2a)

8 Views
YaleCourses
YaleCourses
5 subscribers
0

The Supreme Court Declares the Death Penalty Unconstitutional
(Then Upholds it 4 Years Later)

After rejecting a challenge to the death penalty based on a denial of due process in 1971, the Supreme Court declared capital punishment unconstitutional in 1972 in the case of Furman v. Georgia. Five members of the Court found that the penalty was “cruel and unusual” in violation of the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution, although each of the five justices had different reasons for reaching that conclusion. The other four members of the Court dissented, finding the death penalty constitutional. Many states responded by passing new death penalty laws. They took different approaches in trying to eliminate the constitutional defects identified in Furman. In 1976, the Court ruled on the statutes adopted by five states, holding some of them constitutional and others unconstitutional. The decisions of the Court in the five cases continue to shape the way death is applied by states and federal government.

Challenges to the Death Penalty Leading to it Being Declared Unconstitutional (s2a)
This segment analyzes the Supreme Court’s rejection of a challenge to the death penalty based upon a denial of due process in 1971, and it decision in Furman v. Georgia the following year declaring capital punishment violates the Constitution’s prohibition of “cruel and unusual” punishment.

Class readings:
https://www.dropbox.com/sh/s7r....cjz1xfv027oa/AAD4FWE

https://www.dropbox.com/sh/s7r....cjz1xfv027oa/AADr6Tq

Show more
100% online learning from the world's best universities, organisations and Instructors

 0 Comments sort   Sort By