Browsing HLS Scholarly Articles by Author "Steiker, Carol"
Now showing items 1-13 of 13
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Capital Punishment and Contingency
Steiker, Carol S. (Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2012)This book review of David Garland’s “Peculiar Institution: America’s Death Penalty in an Age of Abolition,” assesses Garland’s contributions both to the literature about the American death penalty and to the broader debate ... -
In Memoriam: William J. Stuntz
Steiker, Carol S. (Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2011) -
Introduction
Steiker, Carol S. (Ohio State University, Michael E. Moritz College of Law, 2011) -
The Limits of the Preventive State
Steiker, Carol S. (1998) -
The Marshall Hypothesis Revisited
Steiker, Carol S. (Howard University School of Law, 2009) -
Murphy on Mercy: A Prudential Reconsideration
Steiker, Carol S. (John Jay College of Criminal Justice, Institute for Criminal Justice Ethics, 2008)The article considers the contributions of law professor Jeffrie Murphy of the Arizona State University to the studies on the moral and theoretical justifications for the institutions of moral and political theory and their ... -
Of Cities, Rainforests, and Frogs: A Response to Allen and Rosenberg
Steiker, Carol S. (1998) -
Opening a Window or Building a Wall? The Effect of Eighth Amendment Death Penalty Law and Advocacy on Criminal Justice More Broadly
STEIKER, JORDAN J.; Steiker, Carol S. (2008) -
Promoting Criminal Justice Reform through Legal Scholarship: Toward a Taxonomy
Steiker, Carol S. (2007) -
Proposed Instruction
Steiker, Carol S. (2001) -
Raising the Bar: Maples v. Thomas and the Sixth Amendment Right to Counsel
Steiker, Carol S. (Harvard Law School, 2013) -
The Seduction of Innocence: The Attraction and Limitations of the Focus on Innocence in Capital Punishment Law and Advocacy
Steiker, Carol S.; STEIKER, JORDAN J. (2005) -
Symposium: Criminal Procedure in the Spotlight: The American Death Penalty and the (In)Visibility of Race
Steiker, Carol S.; Steiker, Jordan M. (University of Chicago Press, 2015)Racial injustice has always cast a shadow over American criminal justice. In the context of capital punishment, racial disparities have been evident since colonial times. Black people have suffered not only disparate ...