Describe death qualification in the context of jury selection. Explain the controversy surrounding the practice
What will be an ideal response?
Death qualification is a jury selection procedure used in capital cases that excludes
prospective jurors who say they would refuse to vote for the death penalty under any
circumstance. Although excluding such jurors from only the sentencing decisions in
capital cases would not be controversial (because these jurors admit that they are not
willing to endorse one of the sentencing options), death qualification is very
controversial because it also excludes these jurors from serving on the juries that
determine verdicts in the first place. The procedure is controversial because research
suggests that people who support the death penalty are not only more prosecutionminded on a host of issues but also more likely to vote guilty in a trial compared to
those who oppose the death penalty. The implication, then, is that using the practice of
death qualification biases juries against defendants, such that they are more likely to be
found guilty by a death-qualified jury than by one consisting of a mix of proponents and
opponents of capital punishment.
You might also like to view...
If the gonads within an embryo produce testosterone because of the presence of a Y gene on the sex chromosome, then the ____________ will develop and the _________ will deteriorate
a. Müllerian ducts; Wolffian ducts b. Wolffian ducts; Müllerian ducts c. ovaries; testes d. testes; ovaries
Who is more likely to make internal attributions for behavior?
a. Asians more than Americans b. Americans more than Asians c. Men more than women d. Women more than men