Executing Justice: The Moral Meaning of the Death Penalty


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About The Book

This compelling book incisively analyzes every philosophical and humanitarian argument about the death penalty. It is a searching study of the ultimate invalidity of all the arguments advanced to justify the ultimate power of the state. The last chapter . . . is a powerful treatment of the reasons why Christianity must logically be opposed to the death penalty. No one is entitled to be heard in the fractious debate about the death penalty until that person has pondered the material discussed in this indispensable book. -- Robert F. Drinan SJ Professor of Law Georgetown University Law Center Lloyd Steffen has powerfully explored the moral reasoning of the death penalty. By utilizing the case of Willie Darden he brings an abstract argument home on a personal level. Finally he poses what this means for those of us who are Christians. What will be your answer? This book provides an excellent consideration of all the available options. -- Rev. Joseph B. Ingle Nobel Peace Prize nominee for his ministry to persons on death row We have by now a shelf of books that offer empirical constitutional or political discussions of the death penalty. What we dont have is a comprehensive accessible and persuasive evaluation of the death penalty in our society from the moral point of view. Thanks to Lloyd Steffens new book that need has been met. He enables us to see in patient detail just how difficult -- if he is right how impossible -- it is to defend the death penalty on moral grounds. May his argument reach and persuade many! -- Hugo Adam Bedau editor of The Death Penalty in America: Current Controversies There is no moral legal or ethical justification for the death penalty and Executing Justice makes this abundantly clear. Steffen makes a compelling case that America can lift itself into the league of nations that long ago abandoned this barbaric practice. -- Morris Dees cofounder and chief trial counsel of the Southern Poverty Law Center Lloyd Steffen is University Chaplain Professor and Chair of the Religion Studies Department at Lehigh University Bethlehem Pennsylvania. He is the author of Life/Choice: The Theory of Just Execution (1994) and The Demonic Turn: The Power of Religion to Inspire or Restrain Violence (2003).
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