
Today, Two-thirds Of The World's Nations Have Abolished The Death Penalty, Either Officially Or In Practice, Due Mainly To The Campaign To End State Executions Led By Western European Nations. Will This Success Spread To Asia, Where Over 95 Percent Of Executions Now Occur? Do Asian Values And Traditions Support Capital Punishment, Or Will Development And Democratization End Executions In The World's Most Rapidly Developing Region? David T. Johnson, An Expert On Law And Society In Asia, And Franklin E. Zimring, A Senior Authority On Capital Punishment, Combine Detailed Case Studies Of The Death Penalty In Asian Nations With Cross-national Comparisons To Identify The Critical Factors For The Future Of Asian Death Penalty Policy. The Clear Trend Is Away From Reliance On State Execution And Many Nations With Death Penalties In Their Criminal Codes Rarely Use It. Only The Hard-line Authoritarian Regimes Of China, Vietnam, Singapore, And North Korea Execute With Any Frequency, And When Authoritarian States Experience Democratic Reforms, The Rate Of Executions Drops Sharply, As In Taiwan And South Korea. Debunking The Myth Of Asian Values, Johnson And Zimring Demonstrate That Politics, Rather Than Culture Or Tradition, Is The Major Obstacle To The End Of Executions. Carefully Researched And Full Of Valuable Lessons, The Next Frontier Is The Authoritative Resource On The Death Penalty In Asia For Scholars, Policymakers, And Advocates Around The World.
This book investigates whether the global trend toward the abolition of the death penalty will extend to Asia, where the vast majority of the world's state executions currently occur. David T. Johnson, a specialist in Asian law and society, and Franklin E. Zimring, a prominent scholar on capital punishment, utilize a comparative framework to analyze the intersection of political systems and penal policy. They argue that political structures, rather than cultural traditions or so-called Asian values, serve as the primary determinants for the continued use of capital punishment in the region.
What You Will Find
Experts and scholars in the fields of criminology and international law recognize this work as a foundational text for understanding the political mechanics of capital punishment in Asia. Readers frequently note the rigorous research and the clarity with which the authors dismantle common myths regarding the role of tradition in penal policy.
Page Count:
544
Publication Date:
2009-01-01
Publisher:
Ebsco Publishing
ISBN-10:
0199714029
ISBN-13:
9780199714025
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