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The Fairer Death
Executing Women in Ohio
By Victor L. Streib
“Professor Streib has significantly added to the scholarship of capital punishment and its jurisprudence with this book.”
—Lyn Entzeroth, author of Capital Punishment and the Judicial Process
Women on death row are such a rarity that, once condemned, they may be ignored and forgotten. Ohio, a typical, middle-of-the-road death penalty state, provides a telling example of this phenomenon. The Fairer Death: Executing Women in Ohio explores Ohio's experience with the death penalty for women and reflects on what this experience reveals about the death penalty for women throughout the nation
Victor Streib's analysis of two
centuries of Ohio death penalty legislation and adjudication reveals no obvious
exclusion of women or even any recognition of an issue of sex bias. In this
respect, Ohio's justice system exemplifies the subtle and insidious nature of
this cultural disparity.
Professor Streib provides detailed descriptions
of the cases of the four women actually executed by Ohio since its founding and
of the cases of the ten women sentenced to death in Ohio in the current death
penalty era (1973-2005). Some of these cases had a profound impact on death
penalty law, but most were routine and drew little attention. A generation
later, reversals and commutations have left only one woman on Ohio's death row.
Although Streib focuses specifically on Ohio, the underlying premise is
that Ohio is, in many ways, a typical death penalty state. The Fairer
Death provides insight into our national experience, provoking
questions about the rationale for the death penalty and the many disparities in
its administration.
Source: http://oupress.admsrv.ohio.edu/index.cfm?view=book_info&book_id=0821416936