ABOUT THIS BOOKUnique among Western democracies in refusing to eradicate the death penalty, the United States has attempted instead to reform and rationalize state death penalty practices through federal constitutional law. Courting Death traces the unusual and distinctive history of top-down judicial regulation of capital punishment under the Constitution and its unanticipated consequences for our time.
In the 1960s and 1970s, in the face of widespread abolition of the death penalty around the world, provisions for capital punishment that had long fallen under the purview of the states were challenged in federal courts. The U.S. Supreme Court intervened in two landmark decisions, first by constitutionally invalidating the death penalty in Furman v. Georgia (1972) on the grounds that it was capricious and discriminatory, followed four years later by restoring it in Gregg v. Georgia (1976). Since then, by neither retaining capital punishment in unfettered form nor abolishing it outright, the Supreme Court has created a complex regulatory apparatus that has brought executions in many states to a halt, while also failing to address the problems that led the Court to intervene in the first place.
While execution chambers remain active in several states, constitutional regulation has contributed to the death penalty’s new fragility. In the next decade or two, Carol Steiker and Jordan Steiker argue, the fate of the American death penalty is likely to be sealed by this failed judicial experiment. Courting Death illuminates both the promise and pitfalls of constitutional regulation of contentious social issues.
REVIEWSThis is the most important book about the death penalty for a generation and, likely, ever. Anyone who cares about the state of justice in America should read this book.
-- Lincoln Caplan, journalist and Visiting Lecturer in Law, Yale Law School
Courting Death is a brilliant and insightful book with a powerful thesis, namely that the death penalty in the United States has been unwittingly regulated to death. It is the most forceful and significant intervention I have read on the question of capital punishment to date, a remarkable contribution to our legal, historical, and political debates.
-- Bernard E. Harcourt, author of Exposed: Desire and Disobedience in the Digital Age
Courting Death charts precisely the past and present of what has sadly become a uniquely American dilemma and, most importantly, sets out the doctrinal road map that will likely guide Supreme Court Justices in the future. Written by the most respected capital punishment scholars of the day, it is essential reading.
-- Michael Meltsner, author of Cruel and Unusual: The Supreme Court and Capital Punishment
[The Steikers] provide a clear and comprehensive look at the 40-year modern history of capital punishment in the United States since its reinstatement in 1976…Courting Death provides an excellent survey of the history of capital punishment and the prospects of abolition…The Steikers explain technical legal issues with such clarity that their book is highly accessible to lawyer and layperson alike.
-- Stephen Rohde Los Angeles Review of Books
Carol and Jordan Steiker…are the leading contemporary scholars of the death penalty. In Courting Death: The Supreme Court and Capital Punishment they have brilliantly defined—in language accessible to the general reader—the massive dysfunction of the current system and the course that a future Supreme Court could take to do away with it.
-- Michael Meltsner Huffington Post
The Steikers deliver an extraordinarily well-documented, forceful and ferocious assault on state and federal administration of capital punishment since then. Courting Death is, almost certainly, the best book on this subject.
-- Glenn C. Altschuler Huffington Post
Carol S. Steiker and Jordan M. Steiker (sister and brother) have written a revealing book about the history of the death penalty in the U.S. and, in particular, the continued difficulties the Supreme Court has had in attempting to regulate capital punishment so that it conforms to constitutional standards…[An] excellent book.
-- Jed S. Rakoff New York Review of Books
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Cover
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Introduction: Regulating the Death Penalty to Death
Chapter 1. Before Constitutional Regulation
Chapter 2. The Supreme Court Steps In
Chapter 3. The Invisibility of Race in the Constitutional Revolution
Chapter 4. Between the Supreme Court and the States
Chapter 5. The Failures of Regulation
Chapter 6. An Unsustainable System?
Chapter 7. Recurring Patterns in Constitutional Regulation
Chapter 8. The Future of the American Death Penalty
Chapter 9. Life after Death
Notes
Acknowledgments
Index