Acknowledgments
Introduction
Charles J. Ogletree, Jr., and Austin Sarat
Part I
1 The Executioner’s Waning Defenses
Michael L. Radelet
2 Blinded by Science on the Road to Abolition?
Simon A. Cole and Jay D. Aronson
3 Abolition in the United States by 2050: On Political Capital and Ordinary Acts of Resistance
Bernard E. Harcourt
4 The Beginning of the End?
Carol S. Steiker and Jordan M. Steiker
5 Rocked but Still Rolling: The Enduring Institution of Capital Punishment in Historical and Comparative Perspective
Michael McCann and David T. Johnson
Part II
6 For Execution Methods Challenges, the Road to Abolition Is Paved with Paradox
Deborah W. Denno
7 Perfect Execution: Abolitionism and the Paradox of Lethal Injection
Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn
8 “No Improvement over Electrocution or Even a Bullet”: Lethal Injection and the Meaning of Speed and Reliability in the Modern Execution Process
Jürgen Martschukat
Part III
9 Torture, War, and Capital Punishment: Linkages and Missed Connections
Robin Wagner-Pacifici
10 Making Difference: Modernity and the Political Formations of Death
Peter Fitzpatrick
About the Contributors
Index