With the bungling of an
execution in Oklahoma, the death penalty was, once again, headline news across
the United States and much of the rest of the world. While the issue of capital punishment is particularly divisive, I wanted to
take a brief look at the issue from Amnesty International's latest annual report on the death penalty
around the world.
During 2013, 778 confirmed
executions took place in 22 countries, an increase of 14 percent compared to
the previous year. This data excludes the number of executions that took
place China since the death penalty in that nation is considered a state
secret, although it is estimated that thousands of executions took place in
China during 2013, more than the world's combined total. According to Dui Hua, it is estimated that 3000 executions took place in China during 2012. As well, the
number of executions that took place in North Korea is unknown.
Excluding China, here are the top
ten nations in order of executions carried out in 2013:
Iran - 369 executions
Iraq - 169 executions
Saudi Arabia - 79 executions,
United States - 39 executions
Somalia - 34 executions
Sudan - 21 executions
Yemen - 13 executions
Japan - 8 executions
Viet Nam - 7 executions
Taiwan - 6 executions
It's interesting to see that the
United States is in the company of Iran, Iraq and Saudi Arabia, nations well
known for their use of capital punishment for crimes of various types. These four nations
are responsible for 656 executions or 84 percent of the total executions that
took place outside of China and North Korea.
Around the world, at least 23,392
people were living under a sentence of death. During 2013 alone, at least
1925 people were sentenced to death in 57 different countries, an increase from
1722 in 2012. Here is a list of the top 10 nations by issuance of new
death sentences in 2013:
Pakistan - 226 death sentences
Bangladesh - 220 death sentences,
Afghanistan - 174 death sentences
Viet Nam - 148 death sentences
Nigeria - 141 death sentences
Somalia - 117 death sentences
Egypt - 109 death sentences
Iran - 91 death sentences
United States - 80 death sentences
Malaysia - 76 death sentences
In this case, it is interesting to
note how many of these nations are Islamic; while we are quite critical of the
imposition of Sharia law, it is interesting to see that six out of ten of the
top ten "death sentence imposers" are Muslim nations.
The United States is the only nation
in the 56 member Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe to have
carried out executions. It is also the only country to have carried out
executions in both North and South America. Among the G-8 nations, only
the United States and Japan carried out executions. While the number of
executions in the United States is still fairly high by international standards, it is down from 43
in 2012.
In the U.S., eighteen states have
now abolished the death penalty. Here is a list of the top three states
that contributed to 2013's total of 39 executions:
Texas - 16 executions with 9 new
death sentences imposed
Florida - 7 executions with 15 new
death sentences imposed
Oklahoma - 6 executions with 1 new
death sentence imposed
In total, in the United States,
there are 3108 people on death row including 731 in California, 412 in Florida
and 298 in Texas. Interestingly, during 2013, there were three posthumous
exonerations.
Here are two interesting graphs, the
first showing the annual number of executions in the United States from 1930 to
2010 and the second showing the annual number of death sentences (black) and
the annual number of executions (in grey):
The Bureau of Justice Statistics found that only
15 percent of people sentenced to death between 1973 and 2009 had been executed
by the end of 2009 with the total number of prisoners facing a death sentence
between 1973 and 2009 hitting 8115 as shown on this chart:
A 2012 study edited by Daniel Nagin and
John Pepper entitled "Deterrence and the Death Penalty" found that
the large number of studies that had been completed over the 35 year period
since the Supreme Court Gregg v. Georgia in 1976 that ended the moratorium on
executions, have not conclusively determined whether or not the death penalty
acts as a deterrent, pushing down homicide rates. As shown on this graph,
while homicide rates have fallen since the 1970s and 1980s, the drop ended in
the late 1990s:
The difficulty measuring the impact
of capital punishment on homicide rates is complicated by other factors
including changes to the criminal justice system and police effectiveness.
For example, here is a graph showing the homicide rate for Texas,
California and New York between 1974 and 2009:
In each of these three states, the
homicide rate patterns track closely, however, each state has a different
approach to capital punishment. In both Texas and California, large
number of people have been sentenced to death (1040 in Texas, 927 in
California), however, Texas executed 447 people compared to only 13 in
California. New York's approach was far different with only 10 people
being sentenced to death between 1973 and 2009 and no executions, yet, its
homicide pattern follows that of Texas and California.
Obviously, any discussion of the use
of the death penalty is fraught with emotion. What I see as most compelling
is the fact that the United States finds itself in the company of China, Saudi
Arabia, Iran and Iraq when it comes to actually imposing death for criminals,
countries that aren't particularly well known for their regard for human
rights.
What lesson does it teach when a state has a policy enabling it to calmly and coolly murder people. It is not a deterrent; it is expensive to the taxpayers, and we know now from DNA evidence that it can result in killing an innocent person. Check out our cohorts in capital punishment.
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