首页
登录
职称英语
Finding something new to say about America’s love affair with the death penal
Finding something new to say about America’s love affair with the death penal
游客
2025-04-25
43
管理
问题
Finding something new to say about America’s love affair with the death penalty is not easy. The subject not only arouses intense emotions, it has produced an ocean of comment from lawyers, judges, politicians, campaigners, statisticians, social scientists and quite a few demagogues. Nevertheless, Franklin Zimring, one of America’s leading criminologists, has managed to rise above this cacophony to write a thought-provoking and genuinely original book, The Contradictions of American Capital Punishment’, which deserves to become a classic.
Mr. Zimring tackles head-on the most puzzling question of all- why are Americans so determined to keep the death penalty when nearly all other developed democracies have given it up, and now view it as barbaric? In the past two decades, attitudes in America and Europe have diverged so much that any dialogue on the subject has been replaced by blank incomprehension, and America’s retention of capital punishment has become a significant diplomatic irritant. For European governments the abolition of capital punishment is a human-rights priority, and they have expended valuable political capital in trying to achieve it. American governments, Republican and Democratic, insist that the death penalty has nothing to do with human-rights, and deeply resent European efforts to make its abolition an international norm.
The difference between European and American attitudes, says Mr. Zimring, is not the breadth of support for the death penalty, but its depth. At the time of the death penalty’s abolition in each developed country, a majority similar to America’s, currently 65%, wanted to keep it, according to opinion polls. But when European political elites turned against it after the Second World War, electorates acquiesced. Today most Europeans probably would not want it back.
The death penalty is a far more contentious issue in America, says Mr. Zimring, because the debate about it draws on a cherished American political tradition which does not exist anywhere else: vigilante justice. Many death-penalty supporters see executions not as acts of a distant or unreliable government, or even as a crime-control measure, but as an instrument of local, community justice, a form of vengeance on behalf of the victims’ relatives.
In a startling analysis, Mr. Zimring shows that most executions are performed in a few states in the south and south-west where the lynching of African-Americans, other forms of mob violence and six-shooter justice were most endemic at the end of the 19th and first half of the 20 centuries. Opinion-poll support for the death penalty may be fairly uniform across America, and 38 states have the death penalty on their books, but many states hardly ever execute anyone. The vast bulk of executions take place only where the values of the lynch mob have endured, he says.
Many people will find this linkage distasteful. But Mr. Zimring marshals a powerful case for it, and sceptics will have to reply to his evidence, not just brush the argument aside. Americans’ distrust of overweening government power is as deeply rooted a tradition as vigilante justice, Mr. Zimring concedes. However, when it comes to the death penalty, this distrust is manifest not in an abolitionist movement, as in other countries, but in the maze of legal-appeals procedures which mean that most murderers condemned to death spend years, even decades, on death row. More death-row inmates are likely to die of old age than by execution. Neither supporters nor opponents of the death penalty are happy with this odd result.
What Americans really want is an error-free death penalty, but this can never be guaranteed, as the recent spate of death-row exonerations has shown. Moreover, Mr. Zimring argues that Americans’ ambivalence about capital punishment can never be resolved. Sooner or later, one of these competing traditions - a regard for careful legal processes to second-guess and constrain government actions, or the desire for vengeance - will have to give way. That will not happen easily. Both date back to the country’s founding.
Mr. Zimring believes, on scanty evidence, that Americans will eventually abandon vigilante values, and abolish the death penalty. But he admits that this will be a messy, bitter affair. And he could well be wrong. His analysis might equally point to another, less palatable outcome: a sweeping aside of legal constraints, and a more rapid pace of executions. [br] Two apparently contradictory statements are made about what Zimring thinks will be the outcome of the debate about the death penalty: one, "that Americans’ ambivalence about capital punishment can never be resolved" and two, that "Americans will eventuall
选项
A、That Zimring believes that the death penalty can’t ever be abolished in America even if, in time, a majority of Americans would like it to be.
B、That Zimring is confused and doesn’t know what he thinks
C、That Zimring is sceptical that it will ever be abolished but maybe it will one day.
D、That Zimring believes that it will eventually be abolished but that the decision will not be easily agreed and when it is it will still be deeply unpopular.
答案
D
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/4052648.html
相关试题推荐
TheordinaryfamilycolonialNorthAmericawasprimarilyconcernedwithshee
TheordinaryfamilycolonialNorthAmericawasprimarilyconcernedwithshee
TheordinaryfamilycolonialNorthAmericawasprimarilyconcernedwithshee
TheordinaryfamilycolonialNorthAmericawasprimarilyconcernedwithshee
TheordinaryfamilycolonialNorthAmericawasprimarilyconcernedwithshee
TheordinaryfamilycolonialNorthAmericawasprimarilyconcernedwithshee
TheordinaryfamilycolonialNorthAmericawasprimarilyconcernedwithshee
TheordinaryfamilycolonialNorthAmericawasprimarilyconcernedwithshee
TheordinaryfamilycolonialNorthAmericawasprimarilyconcernedwithshee
TheordinaryfamilycolonialNorthAmericawasprimarilyconcernedwithshee
随机试题
Historianstendtotellthesamejokewhentheyaredescribinghistoryeduca
Oneofthemostcontentiousissuesinthevastliteratureaboutalcoholcons
“机不可失,时不再来”指的是()A.时间的连续性 B.时间的一维性 C.时
下列关于混凝土工程量计算规定的说法不正确的是( )。A.设计工程量中应计入混凝
A.完全由肾脏排泄 B.主要由肾脏排泄 C.40%~60%由肾脏排泄 D.
关于换填法的说法正确的有()。A、直接用砂、砾、卵石、片石等渗水性材料置换部分
对幼儿发展评价说法错误的是( )。A.具体的评价内容可根据评价目的、教育工作的
在经济衰退时实行扩张政策,有意安排财政赤字;在繁荣时期实行紧缩政策,有意安排财政
以下哪些口腔卫生用品或方法没有去除菌斑的作用A.牙签 B.牙间刷 C.漱口
下列有关了解被审计单位及其环境的说法中,正确的是()。A.注册会计师无须在
最新回复
(
0
)