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Re-Rethinking the Death Penalty
h/t to the Atlantic for a short summary and a reference to this paper. Sunstein is a strong liberal, politically.

Is Capital Punishment Morally Required? The Relevance of Life-Life Tradeoffs

CASS R. SUNSTEIN, University of Chicago Law School
ADRIAN VERMEULE, University of Chicago Law School

March 2005

Abstract:
Recent evidence suggests that capital punishment may have a significant deterrent effect, preventing as many eighteen or more murders for each execution. This evidence greatly unsettles moral objections to the death penalty, because it suggests that a refusal to impose that penalty condemns numerous innocent people to death. Capital punishment thus presents a life-life tradeoff, and a serious commitment to the sanctity of human life may well compel, rather than forbid, that form of punishment. Moral objections to the death penalty frequently depend on a distinction between acts and omissions, but that distinction is misleading in this context, because government is a special kind of moral agent. The familiar problems with capital punishment - potential error, irreversibility, arbitrariness, and racial skew - do not argue in favor of abolition, because the world of homicide suffers from those same problems in even more acute form. The widespread failure to appreciate the life-life tradeoffs involved in capital punishment may depend on cognitive processes that fail to treat "statistical lives" with the seriousness that they deserve.

The full paper can be downloaded from the linked page.
Posted by: too true 2005-06-12
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=121470