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Confronting the Death Penalty: How Language Influences Jurors in Capital Cases [Mīkstie vāki]

4.00/5 (17 ratings by Goodreads)
(Associate Professor of Anthropology, Marshall University)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 256 pages, height x width x depth: 137x208x15 mm, weight: 299 g
  • Sērija : Oxford Studies in Language and Law
  • Izdošanas datums: 11-Dec-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0197545548
  • ISBN-13: 9780197545546
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  • Cena: 29,34 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 256 pages, height x width x depth: 137x208x15 mm, weight: 299 g
  • Sērija : Oxford Studies in Language and Law
  • Izdošanas datums: 11-Dec-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0197545548
  • ISBN-13: 9780197545546
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Confronting the Death Penalty: How Language Influences Jurors in Capital Cases probes how jurors make the ultimate decision about whether another human being should live or die. Drawing on ethnographic and qualitative linguistic methods, this book explores the means through which language helps to make death penalty decisions possible - how specific linguistic choices mediate and restrict jurors', attorneys', and judges' actions and experiences while serving and reflecting on capital trials.

The analysis draws on fifteen months of ethnographic fieldwork in diverse counties across Texas, including participant observation in four capital trials and post-verdict interviews with the jurors who decided those cases. Given the impossibility of access to actual capital jury deliberations, this integration of methods aims to provide the clearest possible window into jurors' decision-making. Using methods from linguistic anthropology, conversation analysis, and multi-modal discourse analysis, Conley analyzes interviews, trial talk, and written legal language to reveal a variety of communicative practices through which jurors dehumanize defendants and thus judge them to be deserving of death.

By focusing on how language can both facilitate and stymie empathic encounters, the book addresses a conflict inherent to death penalty trials: jurors literally face defendants during trial and then must distort, diminish, or negate these face-to-face interactions in order to sentence those same defendants to death. The book reveals that jurors cite legal ideologies of rational, dispassionate decision-making - conveyed in the form of authoritative legal language - when negotiating these moral conflicts. By investigating the interface between experiential and linguistic aspects of legal decision-making, the book breaks new ground in studies of law and language, language and psychology, and the death penalty.

Recenzijas

Dr Riner's approach is a unique one that makes for a compelling read ... a lucid exposition of the contradictions and fallacies that capital jurors must wrestle with in their role within the American criminal justice system ... Confronting the Death Penalty: How Language Influences Jurors in Capital Cases would be an asset to the collection of any academic law library, as well as to legal practitioners searching for a deeper understanding of the link between language and the legal practice. * Erica Friesen, Canadian Law Library Review * There is no doubt that profound lessons from this book can shed new light on the implementation and management of capital pubishment in America. * Zhonghua Wu, Journal of Language and Politics *

Acknowledgments xi
1 Introduction: "That's the hardest thing I've ever had to do"
1(15)
The Significance of Language and Death Penalty Juries
6(4)
Is Capital Sentencing a Violent Act? A Potential Irony
10(2)
A Note on Race and the Death Penalty
12(1)
Road Map for the Book
13(3)
2 Doing Death in Texas: Studying Jurors in the "Death Penalty State"
16(30)
The Death Penalty Schema in Texas
16(5)
State Killing in the United States and Texas
21(2)
Anomalies within Anomalies
23(4)
One Texas Life Case
27(5)
The Death Penalty and Identity in Texas
32(5)
Research Design and Methods
37(2)
Participant Observation
39(3)
Interviews
42(3)
Transcript Conventions
45(1)
3 "I hope I'm strong enough to follow the law": Emotion and Objectivity in Capital Jurors' Decisions
46(36)
Defining Emotion and Empathy
49(3)
Instructing Capital Jurors: A Contradiction
52(4)
Socializing Jurors into Fact-Finders: Capital Voir Dire
56(5)
Objectivity and Impartial Juries
61(4)
Power of the Judge
65(4)
Oath, Honesty, and Obligation
69(2)
Jurors' Postverdict Comments on Emotion and Objectivity
71(5)
Emotion and Masculinity
76(2)
Putting Emotion Aside and Death Qualification
78(4)
4 Facing Death: Empathy, Emotion, and Embodied Actions in Jurors' Decisions
82(38)
Paralinguistic Ideologies
84(5)
Studying Paralinguistic Ideologies in Capital Trials: A Methodological Caveat
89(1)
Jurors and Demeanor Evidence
90(1)
Empathy, the Face, and Law
91(2)
Bodies in Law
93(5)
Defendants' Presence and Personhood
98(2)
Defendants' Offstage Behavior
100(14)
Seeing Faces, Feeling Bodies in Capital Trials
114(6)
5 Linguistic Distance and the Dehumanization of Capital Defendants
120(40)
Proximity and Empathy
123(2)
Empathy, Proximity, and Language
125(1)
Deixis and Reference to Defendants
126(2)
Person Reference and Personhood
128(4)
Analyzing Demonstrative Reference and Proximity
132(1)
Xamples of Repair
133(2)
Legal Models of Linguistic Distance
135(5)
Jurors, Demonstrative Reference, and Giving Death
140(1)
Dehumanization and Death Sentences
141(2)
Demonstrative Reference and Jurors' Attribution of Criminal Responsibility
143(6)
This Guy's Life is at Stake
149(3)
Reference Forms as Indicators of Life or Death Decisions
152(3)
Reference and Defendants' Humanity
155(5)
6 Agents of the State: Capital Jurors' Accountability for Death Sentences
160(39)
Responsibility and the Death Penalty
162(3)
Language and Agency
165(3)
Texas's Sentencing Scheme, Jury Instructions, and Juror Accountability
168(3)
Voir Dire as Socialization into Killing
171(9)
Questioning Jurors about Their Responsibility
180(4)
Jurors' Postverdict Formulations of Responsibility
184(4)
Passive Constructions and Mitigated Agency
188(1)
Juror Polling
189(1)
Collective Agency
190(4)
From Violence to Rules
194(3)
Implications for Legal Practice
197(2)
7 Conclusion: Linguistic Dehumanization and Democracy
199(10)
Legal Language, Dehumanization, and Democracy
200(2)
Juries, Dehumanization, and Democracy
202(2)
Some Words for Legal Practitioners
204(2)
Humanizing Law
206(3)
Bibliography 209(26)
Index 235
Robin Conley Riner is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Marshall University.