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Contradictions in judicial support for capital punishment in India and Bangladesh: utilitarian rationales

Abstract:
India and Bangladesh share a common history, and each has developed somewhat similarly since partition. However, while both countries now have relatively low murder rates, India has seen a decline in the rate of executions, while Bangladesh continues to impose death sentences and carry out executions at a higher rate. There have been challenges to the death penalty in India, restricting its use to exceptional cases. The same has not occurred in Bangladesh. Yet in both countries, systemic flaws in the criminal process are evident. This article draws on two original empirical research projects that explored judges’ opinions on the retention and administration of capital punishment in India and Bangladesh. The data expose justice systems marred by corruption, incompetence, abuses of due process, and arbitrary and inconsistent treatment of defendants from arrest through to conviction and sentencing. It shows that those with the power to sentence to death have little faith in the integrity of the criminal process. Yet, a startling paradox emerges from these studies; despite personal knowledge of its flaws, judges have trust in the death penalty to deter crime and to realise other sentencing aims and feel retention benefits society. This is explained by reference to utilitarian values. Not only did our judges express strongly utilitarian justifications for sentencing people to death, in terms of their erroneous belief in its deterrent effect, but some also articulated utilitarian justifications for misconduct in pre-trial processes, suggesting that it was necessary to break the rules to secure convictions when the system was dysfunctional and ineffective.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1007/s11417-019-09304-0

Authors


More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
SSD
Department:
Law
Sub department:
Law Faculty
Oxford college:
Green Templeton College
Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0002-6352-5790


Publisher:
Springer
Journal:
Asian Journal of Criminology More from this journal
Volume:
15
Pages:
141–161
Publication date:
2019-11-26
Acceptance date:
2019-11-05
DOI:
EISSN:
1871-014X
ISSN:
1871-0131


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:1070105
UUID:
uuid:305c571d-f8d8-4725-80b5-137423dbe498
Local pid:
pubs:1070105
Source identifiers:
1070105
Deposit date:
2019-11-05

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