Seeing Executions as Breaching the Liminal Line: Undermining Modern Justifications for the Death Penalty Öffentlichkeit
Williams, Jennifer Alden (2013)
Abstract
Abstract
Seeing Executions as Breaching the Liminal Line:
Undermining Modern Justifications for the Death Penalty
In his essay, "On Crimes and Punishment," Beccaria stated,
"The
punishment of death is pernicious to society, from the example of
barbarity it
affords." He argued that the law is intended to civilize society,
but by executing
individuals, it does not achieve this goal. Beccaria asks, "Is it
not absurd, that the
laws, which detest and punish homicide, should, in order to prevent
murder,
publicly commit murder themselves?" Benjamin Rush took up this
question in
his presentation to Benjamin Franklin's Society for Promoting
Political Enquires,
when he argued that public executions increase the likelihood of
murder in 1787.
The brutalization argument again was picked up in the modern day,
with articles
appearing in both sociological and economic academic journals from
1978 - 2011.
Only one explanation for the brutalization effect has been posited,
but not
fully explained, by the authors of the modern brutalization effect
articles: that of
lethal vengeance. Lethal vengeance turns the rationalization of the
deterrence
theory on its head: instead of identifying with the condemned
person being
executed, the possible criminal identifies with the state and
"executes" the person
who has wronged him. No detailed explanation for why this is
possible is
articulated, however. This paper attempts to fill this gap in the
literature and
explain why the brutalization effect is possible and, consequently,
how the
modern justifications for the death penalty are undermined.
If only God controls the decisions of life or death for humanity,
then the
state breaks the barrier between God and humanity when it chooses
to execute a
condemned individual. By breaking this barrier, the state opens up
the possibility
for lethal vengeance and the brutalization effect. If executions
are understood as
a Girardian sacrificial ritual that breaches the liminal line
between God and
humanity, today's death penalty justifications of deterrence and
retribution are
undermined.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Introduction
...........................................................................................................................
1
1: Executions as Girardian Sacrificial Rituals that Breach the
Liminal
Line
...........................................................................................................................................
11
Sacrifice as a Rite De Passage
..............................................................................................
13
Early New England Executions and the Girardian Sacrificial
Ritual ............ 18
Girardian Sacrificial Rituals: The Evolution of Early New
England
Executions to Modern Executions
....................................................................................
24
Understandings of God and Breaking the Liminal Line
....................................... 32
2: The Consequences of Breaching the Liminal Line for
Modern
Justifications for the Death Penalty
.......................................................................
39
The History of Deterrence as a Justification for Capital
Punishment .......... 40
Deterrence or Brutalization: Literature Review
.......................................................
42
Brutalization and the Liminal Line
..................................................................................
48
Retribution as an Invalid Justification without Deterrence
.............................. 51
Conclusion
............................................................................................................................
56
Bibliography
........................................................................................................................
57
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