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Racial Prejudice Juror Empathy And Sentencing In Death Penalty Cases Criminal Justice Recent Scholarship Bryan C Edelman

  • SKU: BELL-2180118
Racial Prejudice Juror Empathy And Sentencing In Death Penalty Cases Criminal Justice Recent Scholarship Bryan C Edelman
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Racial Prejudice Juror Empathy And Sentencing In Death Penalty Cases Criminal Justice Recent Scholarship Bryan C Edelman instant download after payment.

Publisher: LFB Scholarly Publishing LLC
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.09 MB
Pages: 221
Author: Bryan C. Edelman
ISBN: 1593321279
Language: English
Year: 2006

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Racial Prejudice Juror Empathy And Sentencing In Death Penalty Cases Criminal Justice Recent Scholarship Bryan C Edelman by Bryan C. Edelman 1593321279 instant download after payment.

In capital trials archival research documents race-of-victim discrimination while the experimental research supports a race-of-offender effect. Using interviews with jurors, Edelman sought to reconcile this conflict and explain how and when race effects are likely to occur. White jurors were more likely to discount mitigating evidence when the victim was white. White jurors empathized more with a white than black victim. Victim race also had an indirect effect on the evaluation of the defendant. Killers of whites were evaluated less positively than killers of blacks. These two effects suggest that white jurors were less likely to hold a life sentence position when a black defendant was convicted for murdering a white victim.

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