TA的每日心情 | 慵懒 2020-7-26 05:11 |
---|
签到天数: 1017 天 [LV.10]大乘
|
code_abc 发表于 2013-3-6 16:22
1 F) q' R& z& d4 Y* S! `粗略看了一下,我认为这个分析有一定道理。不过还有值得商榷的地方,文中以死刑执行率的谋杀率做相关性研 ...
! Z' D( p9 G( b) l& `/ QAs I said, Canada de facto abolished death penalty in 1963. This is from wikipeida:
- { S, I0 J; i2 i" K
. l- o/ t- a/ x! P% m8 b. F"Following the success of Lester Pearson and the Liberal Party in the 1963 federal election, and through the successive governments of Pierre Trudeau, the federal cabinet commuted all death sentences as a matter of policy. Hence, the de facto abolition of the death penalty in Canada occurred in 1963, with legal abolition a formality"
2 o& F( w, ^( M2 @9 S U, N' Q
/ s, |% u3 D) H. w0 U X( Q' a, \. lThe de jure abolition of death penalty in Canada came in 1976 and 1998.2 u1 C$ E4 F% E, Y
2 E" a+ _9 z& h$ K# p# a5 r
Donahue and Wolfers also mentioned studies using the Illinois death penalty moratorium as a natural experiment (page 819). In January 2003, Outgoing Illinois governor George Ryan, pardoned four death-row inmates and commuted the sentences of the remaining 167 to life in prison without the possibility of parole. The authors found "the relationship between homicides in Illinois and the rest of the country is roughly unchanged since the moratorium. If anything, the bars appear persistently negative, suggesting that Illinois experienced about three fewer homicides per month than one would
% ~" y$ l2 ~; S" A0 N: k! {* h: ehave expected based upon its previous relationship with the rest of the country"
, s* k, k5 }0 ~: T) P' V, Q! E3 `1 h( J: ?. ]' g, ?2 k
I think these answers your question.4 K1 @& t8 k) u+ Q. D9 ?- Q
' |6 t( F$ N/ S' t1 M! L |
|