Book Description
Analyzes the history of enslaved African Americans' relationship with the criminal courts of the Old Dominion during a 160 year period.
Author : Philip J. Schwarz
Publisher : The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd.
Page : 372 pages
File Size : 27,92 MB
Release : 1998
Category : African American criminals
ISBN : 1886363544
Analyzes the history of enslaved African Americans' relationship with the criminal courts of the Old Dominion during a 160 year period.
Author : J. H. Ingraham
Publisher : BoD – Books on Demand
Page : 53 pages
File Size : 35,48 MB
Release : 2024-04-20
Category :
ISBN : 3368865684
Author : Dan Malone
Publisher : Andrews McMeel Publishing
Page : 247 pages
File Size : 32,86 MB
Release : 2013-02-05
Category : History
ISBN : 1449444911
With virtually every poll in America citing crime as one of the public's biggest concerns, in late 1994 and early 1995, the Dallas Morning News sent a questionnaire to every man and woman in the country on Death Row, asking some 75 questions about their crimes, their experiences, their attitudes, etc. The survey was drafted by the News with input from a veteran capital murder prosecutor, a Death Row appeals lawyer, a criminologist, a forensic psychiatrist, a Death Row warden and a former Death Row inmate. The paper received received more than 700 responses.The result is the first in-depth, comprehensive national survey of Death Row inmates. This book is an expansion of the paper's four-installment series that appeared in 1997.
Author : Chelsea Berry
Publisher : University of Pennsylvania Press
Page : 273 pages
File Size : 35,12 MB
Release : 2024-09-17
Category : History
ISBN : 1512826502
By the time of the opening of the Atlantic world in the fifteenth century, Europeans and Atlantic Africans had developed significantly different cultural idioms for and understandings of poison. Europeans considered poison a gendered “weapon of the weak” while Africans viewed it as an abuse by the powerful. Though distinct, both idioms centered on fraught power relationships. When translated to the slave societies of the Americas, these understandings sometimes clashed in conflicting interpretations of alleged poisoning events. In Poisoned Relations, Chelsea Berry illuminates the competing understandings of poison and power in the Atlantic World. Poison was connected to central concerns of life: to the well-being in this world for oneself and one’s relatives; to the morality and use of power; and to the fraught relationships that bound people together. The social and relational nature of ideas about poison meant that the power struggles that emerged in poison cases, while unfolding in the extreme context of slavery, were not solely between enslavers and the enslaved—they also involved social conflict within enslaved communities. Poisoned Relations examines more than five hundred investigations and trials in four colonial contexts—British Virginia, French Martinique, Portuguese Bahia, and the Dutch Guianas—bringing a groundbreaking application of historical linguistics to bear on the study of the African diaspora in the Americas. Illuminating competing understandings of poison and power in this way, Berry opens new avenues of evidence through which to navigate the violence of colonial archival silences.
Author : Scott Christianson
Publisher : NYU Press
Page : 180 pages
File Size : 16,67 MB
Release : 2001-11
Category : History
ISBN : 0814716164
An inside look into one of the most mythologized prisons in modern America--the Sing Sing death house In the annals of American criminal justice, two prisons stand out as icons of institutionalized brutality and deprivation: Alcatraz and Sing Sing. In the 70 odd years before 1963, when the death sentence was declared unconstitutional in New York, Sing Sing was the site of almost one-half of the 1,353 executions carried out in the state. More people were executed at Sing Sing than at any other American prison, yet Sing Sing's death house was, to a remarkable extent, one of the most closed, secret and mythologized places in modern America. In this remarkable book, based on recently revealed archival materials, Scott Christianson takes us on a disturbing and poignant tour of Sing Sing's legendary death house, and introduces us to those whose lives Sing Sing claimed. Within the dusty files were mug shots of each newly arrived prisoner, most still wearing the out-to-court clothes they had on earlier that day when they learned their verdict and were sentenced to death. It is these sometimes bewildered, sometimes defiant, faces that fill the pages of Condemned, along with the documents of their last months at Sing Sing. The reader follows prisoners from their introduction to the rules of Sing Sing, through their contact with guards and psychiatrists, their pleas for clemency, escape attempts, resistance, and their final letters and messages before being put to death. We meet the mother of five accused of killing her husband, the two young Chinese men accused of a murder during a robbery and the drifter who doesn't remember killing at all. While the majority of inmates are everyday people, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were also executed here, as were the major figures in the infamous Murder Inc., forerunner of the American mafia. Page upon page, Condemned leaves an indelible impression of humanity and suffering.
Author : Marcus Tullius Cicero
Publisher :
Page : 126 pages
File Size : 45,44 MB
Release : 1871
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Marcus Tullius Cicero
Publisher :
Page : 538 pages
File Size : 49,5 MB
Release : 1877
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Marcus Tullius Cicero
Publisher :
Page : 564 pages
File Size : 43,62 MB
Release : 1891
Category :
ISBN :
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 1016 pages
File Size : 37,55 MB
Release : 1898
Category : Law
ISBN :
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 1024 pages
File Size : 28,46 MB
Release : 1898
Category : Law
ISBN :