A Case Against Delay as a Ground for Commutation of Death Sentences
In: 7 NUJS L. Rev. 321 (2014)
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In: 7 NUJS L. Rev. 321 (2014)
SSRN
In: Islamophobia studies journal, Band 3, Heft 1
ISSN: 2325-839X
In: Journal of gay & lesbian social services: issues in practice, policy & research, Band 2, Heft 2, S. 113-116
ISSN: 1540-4056
In anticipation of the threat and the dangers of drug abuse and illicit trafficking, Indonesia as a whole has had the law on ratification of the Convention , including the United Nations on combating illicit trafficking in narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances in 1988. Policy is required drug crimes (penal policy). Applicable policies regarding how to commit criminal law legislation in force at the moment and formulated policies that lead to renewal (penal law reform) who formulated the laws of criminal law . The global trend will be a moratorium on the death penalty, the idea of humanism or universal human values sometimes correlated inversely with the application giving rise to the defense of the human rights perspective. Dynamics in the world of criminal law shifted from theory to theory retaliation treatment clinic . Policy on the death penalty in law on drugs illustrates the manifestation of the idea of balance or mono-dualistic and offer alternative policies forward in line with the function and purpose of the law-making in the context of national law in Indonesia .Keywords : Capital Punishment, Narcotics, Moratorium
BASE
In: Holocaust and genocide studies, Band 27, Heft 2, S. 299-312
ISSN: 1476-7937
In: Journal of family issues, Band 4, Heft 4, S. 593-612
ISSN: 1552-5481
This article examines the impact on family members of the uncertainty surrounding the institutionalization of a loved one. Detailed observations and interviews were conducted with several men sentenced to death in Florida and with their families. The stresses of death row confinement for both the family and inmate are outlined. It is found that the stresses of death row have major consequences for family and friends, with some withdrawing and others reacting with renewed support. These reactions can in turn produce additional tension for the inmate. Conditions that inhibit a family's ability to cope with the situation are also discussed, such as restrictions on families talking with one another in the visiting room and the lack of opportunity to phone their incarcerated member.
Front Cover -- Front Flip -- Title Page -- Half Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Key Figures -- Part I: Guilty -- 1. That Means a Hanging! -- 2. Give Them the Extreme Penalty -- 3. I'll Tell Her If I Have To -- 4. Send a Woman to the Gallows? How Could You? -- Part II: The Year Before -- 5. Gone -- 6. The Crime in Dasso's Head -- 7. The Widow's Award -- 8.We Laid Him on the Prairie -- Part III: To Shield and Protect -- 9. Unraveling the Safety Nets -- 10. You Would Have Wanted It Too -- 11. I Ought Not Tell You How to Try Your Case -- 12. You Don't Know What Burdens I Am Carrying -- 13. The White Widow -- 14. Do You Love Your Mother? -- 15. Just the Bare Skull -- 16. He Took the Body on His Back -- 17. Oh, Dough -- 18. Sabella on the Stand -- 19. Don't Think of Her as a Woman -- Part IV: Ninety-Five Days to Die -- 20. The Guilt of Others -- 21. Eighty-Nine and Ninety -- 22. The Surratt Effect -- 23.Dust of the Feet -- 24. You've Got Me -- 25. Given Under My Hand and Seal -- Part V: Passing Through the Fire -- 26. Monkey Meets a Tiger -- 27. My God! What Did They Do? -- 28. Slumming in the Police Station -- 29. Hula Lou, the Gal Who Can't Be True -- 30. A Delicate Condition -- 31. Goldfish -- 32. A Hanging Case -- Epilogue: All That Jazz -- Acknowledgments -- Chronology -- Notes -- Index -- Back Flip: About the Author -- Back Cover
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Chinese-Australian writer Yang Hengjun seen at the Beijing Institute of Technology
SSRN
On April 24, a revolutionary court in Iran sentenced dissident rapper Toomaj Salehi to death on charges of "spreading corruption on the Earth."
SWP
In Yemen, the massive use of explosive weapons with wide area effects in populated areas has not only had deadly consequences for civilians, but has also had a dramatic impact on the infrastructure and systems that civilians depend upon to access essential services. Yemen shows how the long-term or reverberating effects of explosive weapons use, referring to how the destruction of infrastructure has implications for the wider systems of services in a country, are just as deadly in a crisis as injuries from the explosion and even impact a greater number of people than those in the vicinity of the original attack. The damage inflicted on the infrastructure and services necessary for food, transport, health, and water threaten civilians and prolong suffering long after the bombing has ended. For this reason, States, UN agencies, international organisations, and civil society, including HI and other members of the International Network on Explosive Weapons, are working to end the harm caused by explosive weapons in populated areas by setting international norms against their use and are calling on all States to support the development of a strong political declaration against the use of explosive weapons with wide area effects in populated areas.
BASE
In: International review of law and economics, Band 22, Heft 1, S. 1-23
ISSN: 0144-8188