Last chance for life: clemency in Southeast Asian death penalty cases
In: Clarendon studies in criminology
42 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Clarendon studies in criminology
In: Daniel Pascoe, Worthless Checks? Clemency, Compassionate Release, and the Finality of Life Without Parole, 118 Nw. U. L. Rev. 1393 (2024).
SSRN
In: Australian Journal of Asian Law, Vol. 24, No. 1, Article 06: 67-81, 2023
SSRN
In: City University of Hong Kong School of Law Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2022-002
SSRN
In: Learning Matters: Teaching and Learning at CUHK Law
SSRN
In: Legal Education Review, (Vol 30(1), 2020)
SSRN
In: Asian journal of law and society, Band 7, Heft 3, S. 587-591
ISSN: 2052-9023
In: Asian Journal of Law and Society (Vol 7(3), 2020)
SSRN
In: Clarendon studies in criminology
In: Australian Journal of Asian Law, 2019, Vol 19 No 2, Article 6: 247-264
SSRN
In: Clarendon studies in criminology
In: Oxford scholarship online
All five contemporary practitioners of the death penalty in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore and Vietnam, have performed executions on a regular basis over the past few decades. NGO Amnesty International currently classifies each of these nations as death penalty 'retentionists'. However, notwithstanding a common willingness to execute, the number of death sentences passed by courts that are reduced to a term of imprisonment or where the prisoner is released from custody altogether, through grants of clemency by the executive branch of government, varies remarkably among these neighbouring political allies. In this text, the patterns which explain why some countries in the region award clemency far more often than do others in death penalty cases are explored and explained.
In: ALC Briefing Papers 7
SSRN
In: Melbourne Journal of International Law, Band 18, Heft 1
SSRN
In: Indonesia Law Review, Volume 7(3) (2017) 313-339
SSRN
SSRN
Working paper