September 1998
Symposium
How the Death Penalty Works: Empirical Studies of the Modern Capital Sentencing System
How Empirical Studies Can Affect Positively the Politics of the Death Penalty
Ronald J. Tabak
Update: American Public Opinion on the Death Penalty—It's Getting Personal
Samuel R. Gross
Foreclosed Impartiality in Capital Sentencing: Jurors' Predispositions, Guilt-Trial Experience, and Premature Decision Making
William J. Bowers, Marla Sandys & Benjamin D. Steiner
The Capital Jury and Absolution: The Intersection of Trial Strategy, Remorse, and the Death Penalty
Scott E. Sundby
But Was He Sorry? The Role of Remorse in Capital Sentencing
Theodore Eisenberg, Stephen P. Garvey & Martin T. Wells
Racial Discrimination and the Death Penalty in the Post-Furman Era: An Empirical and Legal Overview, with Recent Findings from Philadelphia
David C. Baldus, George Woodworth, David Zuckerman, Neil Adam Weiner & Barbara Broffitt
Post-McCleskey Racial Discrimination Claims in Capital Cases
John H. Blume, Theodore Eisenberg & Sheri Lynn Johnson
Probing the Capital Prosecutor's Perspective: Race of the Discretionary Actors
Jeffrey J. Pokorak
Note
Toward a Midpoint Valuation Standard in Cram Down: Ointment for the Rash Decision
Chris Lenhart