Slavery and the Death Penalty : A Study in Abolition - Bharat Malkani

Slavery and the Death Penalty

A Study in Abolition

By: Bharat Malkani

Hardcover | 23 May 2018

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This book compares the movement to abolish slavery in pre-Civil War America with the contemporary movement to abolish the death penalty in the United States. The purpose of this comparative study is to set out what today's death penalty abolitionists can learn from the successes and failures of those who worked to abolish slavery. An interdisciplinary approach is taken to compare legal and political efforts to abolish slavery and the death penalty. Further, since lawyers and politicians respond to the public mood, and vice versa, attention is also paid to the cultural and social conditions in which slavery abolitionists operated, and in which today's death penalty abolitionists currently operate. An interdisciplinary approach is necessary because legal, political and cultural abolitionist efforts do not operate in a vacuum, and thus the different strands of abolitionism need to be considered holistically.
Industry Reviews

'Bharat Malkani, tying together similarities and differences between slavery and capital punishment, provides an important in-depth examination of the connections between the efforts to abolish those practices. Slavery and the Death Penalty is a timely book about America's legacy of racial violence and how that legacy created the foundation of the modern U.S. death penalty. Malkani uses historical analysis and an appeal to human dignity to provide essential lessons for those interested in human rights and the future of America's practice of executing prisoners.'

Jeffrey L. Kirchmeier, CUNY School of Law, USA

'By now, everybody paying attention knows about the role race plays in the criminal justice system as a whole, and the death penalty regime in particular. By punishing murderers of white victims more severely than murderers of victims of color, the death penalty system perpetuates racism. But not until now has anyone set out to thoroughly and systematically examine the relationship between 19th century abolitionists and contemporary death penalty opponents. Bharat Malkani's intriguing and comprehensive work not only identifies deep parallels between slavery opponents and contemporary abolitionists, but also contains wise and potentially valuable lessons for those seeking to end capital punishment in the US. This impressive volume is a must read for those interested in making the criminal justice system truly just.'
David R. Dow, Cullen Professor, University of Houston Law Center; and Rorschach Visiting Professor of History, Rice University, USA


'Bharat Malkani, tying together similarities and differences between slavery and capital punishment, provides an important in-depth examination of the connections between the efforts to abolish those practices. Slavery and the Death Penalty is a timely book about America's legacy of racial violence and how that legacy created the foundation of the modern U.S. death penalty. Malkani uses historical analysis and an appeal to human dignity to provide essential lessons for those interested in human rights and the future of America's practice of executing prisoners.'

Jeffrey L. Kirchmeier, CUNY School of Law, USA

'By now, everybody paying attention knows about the role race plays in the criminal justice system as a whole, and the death penalty regime in particular. By punishing murderers of white victims more severely than murderers of victims of color, the death penalty system perpetuates racism. But not until now has anyone set out to thoroughly and systematically examine the relationship between 19th century abolitionists and contemporary death penalty opponents. Bharat Malkani's intriguing and comprehensive work not only identifies deep parallels between slavery opponents and contemporary abolitionists, but also contains wise and potentially valuable lessons for those seeking to end capital punishment in the US. This impressive volume is a must read for those interested in making the criminal justice system truly just.'
David R. Dow, Cullen Professor, University of Houston Law Center; and Rorschach Visiting Professor of History, Rice University, USA

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