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Capital Punishment
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Capital punishment, commonly known as the death penalty, is the state-sanctioned execution of an individual as punishment for a serious crime, most often murder. Students encounter this topic across criminology, law, ethics, political science, and sociology courses, where it generates sustained academic debate because it sits at the intersection of justice, human rights, state power, and social policy. Its complexity makes it an enduring subject for research: questions about whether execution deters crime, whether it is applied fairly, and whether any government has the moral authority to take a life resist easy resolution and demand careful reasoning supported by evidence.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a clear argumentative stance, either defending capital punishment as a proportionate response to heinous crimes or arguing that it is not justifiable on moral or practical grounds. Others focus on specific contexts, such as capital punishment in America broadly or within Texas in particular. Human rights frameworks appear as a lens for critique, while some papers address narrower populations, examining juvenile perceptions or cases involving correctional officers as victims. Empirical approaches also appear, with statistical methods used to analyze data related to crime and punishment outcomes.

A strong essay on capital punishment requires a precisely scoped thesis that commits to one defensible position rather than surveying all sides without judgment. Evidence drawn from legal cases, criminological research, and documented execution records carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating moral arguments with deterrence arguments, which rely on different kinds of evidence and must be developed separately to be persuasive.

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Paper Doctorate
Panoptism Michel Foucault Used the Term Panoptism
Michel Foucault used the term Panoptism (all-seeing) to describe the methods of control and surveillance used by industrial society to discipline and control the lower classes, whether in factories, schools, hospitals,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Analyzing the Role of the Forensic Psychologist in Criminal Investigation and Prosecution
It should be noted that psychology has not had a clearly defined space in the judicial field. On the one hand, while the law demands tangible and verifiable data, psychology, answers from knowledge conjectural.
Research Paper Doctorate
Capital punishment: ethical, legal, and social perspectives
Like abortion, the institution of capital punishment is a very divisive topic. The line dividing the supporters and opponents of capital punishment is variably drawn across political philosophies, race, sex and religion.
Paper Undergraduate
Murderers Receive Death Penalties? Should the Death
Should the Death Penalty Be Mandatory for People Who Kill Other People?
Research Paper Doctorate
Ethics of Human Cloning in 1971, Nobel
In 1971, Nobel Prize winning-scientist James Watson wrote an article warning about the growing possibility of a "clonal man." Because of both the moral and social dangers cloning posed to humankind, Watson called for a…
Essay Doctorate
Economic perspectives on the death penalty in religious contexts
In 1972, The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in the case of Furman v. Georgia that the death penalty, as applied in three capital cases in the state of Georgia was "cruel and unusual punishment and in violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. (Hastings and Johnson, 2001, paraphrased) A mere four years later the state of Georgia was once against before the Supreme Court in the case of Gregg v. Georgia, a case in which the decision handed down by the court found that the death penalty was in fact constitutional. (Hastings and Johnson, 2001, paraphrased) The objective of this study is to examine the practice of the death penalty from an economic perspective. Towards this end, this study will examine the literature in this area of study. According to a recent report there are several states considering abolition of the death penalty including the states of Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, and New Hampshire, all of which have "shifted the debate about capital punishment, at least in part, from morality to cost." (The Economist, 2009, p.1)
Paper Masters
History and Purpose of the American Prison System
The American prison system has throughout the years developed to become home to the increasing population of the nation's criminals. The increasing population of these criminals in the American prison system is due to…
Paper Doctorate
Medical Ethics: Doctor-Patient Relationship and Physician Conduct
Physicians today - is it a profession or craft?
Paper Undergraduate
Public Policy Analysis There Is a Sense
This research paper is an expansion of one written earlier in the semester which has to do with rational versus irrational thought with regard to the criminal justice system in America. The main thrust of the paper is to explain rational choice theory and how it has been used as a basis for the deterrence of crime in the United States.
Paper Undergraduate
Death penalty: arguments, ethics, and policy
From the beginning of a capital punishment trial, the focus of the legal process is on the perpetrator's rights. If found guilty of the crime for which he or she stands accused, and once the death penalty sentence is…