01179 2200241 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001500097041000800112082001100120084001700131100002900148245010900177260005600286300003500342520035400377650005900731650007200790650002700862990002400889990002400913INLIS00000000000228220221111021349 a0010-0520002282221111 | | eng  a0472098608 aeng a364.66 a364.66 FLE j0 aFleury-Steiner, Benjamin1 aJurors' Stories Of Death :bHow America's Death Penalty Invests In Inequality /cBenjamin Fleury-Steiner aMichigan :bThe University of Michigan Press,c2004 axix, 199 p. ; 24 cm. ;c24 cm. aat the end of the day, the accounts in this book illustrate that no one can walk in the defedant's shoes. and, therefore, the decision to take or space a life is inevitably a flawed one, driven by the dynamics of jury room, personal experiences that are supposed to have no role in the process but cannot be factored out and skewed rationalizations. 4aDiscrimination in capital punishment -- United States. 4aDiscrimination in criminal justice administration -- United States. 4aJury -- United States. a05139/MKRI-P/I-2008 a05139/MKRI-P/I-2008