Death Penalty Abolitionism From the Enlightenment to Modernity

American Journal of Comparative Law 71(1): 46-97 (2023), https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcl/avad011.

51 Pages Posted: 3 Dec 2020 Last revised: 10 Oct 2023

See all articles by Mugambi Jouet

Mugambi Jouet

University of Southern California Gould School of Law

Date Written: November 18, 2020

Abstract

The modern movement to abolish the death penalty in the United States stresses that this punishment cannot be applied fairly and effectively. The movement does not emphasize that killing prisoners is inhumane per se. Its focus is almost exclusively on administrative, procedural, and utilitarian issues, such as recurrent exonerations of innocents, incorrigible racial discrimination, endemic arbitrariness, lack of deterrent value, and spiraling financial costs. By comparison, modern European law recognizes any execution as an inherent violation of human rights rooted in dignity. This humanistic approach is often assumed to be “European” in nature and foreign to America, where distinct sensibilities lead people to concentrate on practical problems surrounding executions. In reality, this Article demonstrates that the significant transatlantic divergence in abolitionism is a relatively recent development. By the late eighteenth century, abolitionists in Europe and America recurrently denounced the inhumanity of executions in language foreshadowing modern human rights norms. Drawing on sources overlooked by scholars, including the views of past American and French abolitionists, the Article shows that reformers previously converged in employing a polyvalent rhetoric blending humanistic and practical objections to executions. It was not before the 1970s and 1980s that a major divergence materialized. As America faced an increasingly punitive social climate leading to the death penalty’s resurgence and the rise of mass incarceration, its abolitionists largely abandoned humanistic claims in favor of practical ones. Meanwhile, the opposite generally occurred as abolitionism triumphed in Europe. These findings call into question the notion that framing the death penalty as a human rights abuse marks recent shifts in Western Europe or international law. While human rights have indeed become the official basis for abolition in modern Europe, past generations of European and U.S. abolitionists defended similar moral and political convictions. These humanistic norms reflect a long-term evolution traceable to the Renaissance and Enlightenment. But for diverse social transformations, America may have kept converging with Europe in gradually adopting humanistic norms of punishment.

Keywords: death penalty, mass incarceration, criminal punishment, dignity, human rights, wrongful convictions, race, Eighth Amendment, United States, France, Europe, Canada, comparative law, legal history, Renaissance, Enlightenment

Suggested Citation

Jouet, Mugambi, Death Penalty Abolitionism From the Enlightenment to Modernity (November 18, 2020). American Journal of Comparative Law 71(1): 46-97 (2023), https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcl/avad011., Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3733016 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3733016

Mugambi Jouet (Contact Author)

University of Southern California Gould School of Law ( email )

699 Exposition Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90089
United States

HOME PAGE: http://https://gould.usc.edu/faculty/?id=78647

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