JUSTIFICATION FOR AND THE ABOLITION OF CAPITAL PUNISHMENT UNDER HUMAN RIGHTS LAW The legal infliction of death as a penalty for violating criminal law has been in existence from time immemorial, people have been put to death for various forms of wrong doings and methods of execution have included crucifixion, stoning, drowning, burning at stake, impaling and beheading. Today capital punishment is typically accomplished by lethal gas or injection, electrocution, hanging or shooting. The human right proponents see death penalties as a violation of the right to life and human dignity as such countries that are becoming more democratic are eager to abolish it. The trend in most industrialized nations has been to first stop executing prisoners and then substitute long terms of imprisonment for death as the most severe of criminal penalties, about 90 nation have abolished death penalties and an almost equal number of nations, (most of which are developing countries in which Nigeria is included) have retained it This thesis considers the argument for and against death penalty in relation to human rights, the argument against this concept goes beyond the Human Right Parlance, as there are other arguments like; the propensity to condemn and execute innocent citizens, the non-deterrent effect of capital punishment, the arbitrary use of the concept against the poor, the discriminately application of the concept on the basis of race, and the lesser argument that proclaims that capital punishment is cruel and inhuman. All these argument have not been reckoned with by anti-abolitionist, as some of them have come up with other modes of executions that they believe are more humane and less cruel, the sole aim of this is to kill the argument of cruel and inhuman treatment The retributive nature of the human race would rather love that a murderer be necessarily paid back in His own coin, this is believed to be the anti-abolitionist main reason for insisting on the retention of death penalty. If the cost of executing an innocent person and abolishing the concept of death penalty is compared, it would be discovered that, it is more beneficial to abolish the use of death penalty than to lose valuable citizens to wrongful executions. Moreover, countries that have substituted life sentence for death penalty are not worse off than countries that have retained it. Table of Content CHAPTER 1 GENERAL INTRODUCTION 1.0.0: INTRODUCTION 1.1.0: OBJECTIVES OF STUDY 1.2.0: SCOPE OF STUDY 1.3.0: METHODOLOGY 1.4.0: LITERATURE REVIEW 1.5.0: DEFINITION OF TERMS 1.6.0: CONCLUSION CHAPTER 2 CAPITAL PUNISHMENT AND HUMAN RIGHT LAW 2.0.0: INTRODUCTION 2.1.0PUNISHMENT 2.1.1FORMS OF PUNISHMENT 2.1.2COMPENSATION 2.1.3INCARCERATION 2.1.4CORPORAL PUNISHMENT 2.1.5BANISHMENT 2.1.6CAPITAL PUNISHMENT 2.1.7OTHER APPROACHES 2.2.0: HISTORICAL FRAMEWORK OF CAPITAL PUNISHMENT 2.2.1: MODES OF EXECUTION 2.2.2CRUCIFIXION 2.2.3STONING 2.2.4HANGING 2.2.5: SHOOTING OR FIRING SQUAD 2.2.6: GAS CHAMBER OR LETHAL GAS MODE OF EXECUTION 2.2.7: ELECTROCUTION 2.3.0: WORLD WIDE ANALYSIS OF CAPITAL PUNISHMENT 2.4.0: HISTORY OF HUMAN RIGHTS 2.5.0: CAPITAL PUNISHMENT AND RIGHT TO LIFE 2.6.0: CAPITAL PUNISHMENT AND RIGHT TO HUMAN DIGNITY 2.7.0: CONCLUSION CHAPTER 3 JUSTIFICATIONS FOR CAPITAL PUNISHMENT AND ITS ABOLITION 3.0.0: INTRODUCTION 3.1.0: JUSTIFICATIONS FOR CAPITAL PUNISHMENT 3.1.1JUST PUNISHMENT 3.1.2DETERRENCE 3.1.3INCAPACITATION 3.2.0ABOLITION OF CAPITAL PUNISHMENT 3.2.1PROPENSITY TO CONDEMN INNOCENT DEFENDANTS 3.2.2DISCRIMINATLY APPLICATION ON THE BASIS OF RACE 3.2.3ARBITRARY APPLICATION AGAINST THE POOR 3.2.4 COMPARING COST TO BENEFITS 3.3.0FLAWS IN ARGUMENTS FOR ABOLITION 3.3.1RACIAL BIAS 3.3.2RISK TO THE INNOCENT 3.4.0FLAWS IN THE ARGUMENTS FOR CAPITAL PUNISHMENT 3.4.1CONCLUSION CHAPTER 4 A COMPARISON OF THE NIGERIAN CAPITAL PUNISHMENT TO THAT OF OTHER SELECTED COUNTRIES 4.0.0: INTRODUCTION 4.1.0 THE NIGERIAN AND U.S.A CAPITAL PUNISHMENT COMPARED 4.2.0 THE NIGERIAN AND AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL PUNISHMENT COMPARED 4.3.0NIGERIAN AND SOUTH AFRICAN CAPITAL PUNISHMENT COMPARED 4.4.0: CONCLUSION CHAPTER 5 CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS 5.0.0: CONCLUSION 5.1.0 RECOMMENDATIONS BIBLIOGRAPHY ARTICLES IN JOURNALS ARTICLES ON THE INTERNET BOOKS CHAPTERS IN BOOKS
JUSTIFICATION FOR AND THE ABOLITION OF CAPITAL PUNISHMENT UNDER HUMAN RIGHTS LAW
ABSTRACT The right to life is the most basic, fundamental, primordial and supreme right which human beings are entitled to have and without which the protection of all other human rights becomes either meaningless or less effective. Indeed, the right of each person to life is something, which is intrinsic to his status as a human being and which... Continue Reading
ABSTRACT The right to life is the most basic, fundamental, primordial and supreme right which human beings are entitled to have and without which the protection of all other human rights becomes either meaningless or less effective. Indeed, the right of each person to life is something, which is intrinsic to his status as a human being and which... Continue Reading
ABSTRACT Ever since independence, the criminal justice system of Nigeria has accommodated capital punishment which is also known as “death penalty”, as a punitive measure for specifically defined offences. In the past 15 years, scholars, researchers and students of penology and criminology have championed the debate for abolition of death... Continue Reading
ABSTRACT Ever since independence, the criminal justice system of Nigeria has accommodated capital punishment which is also known as “death penalty”, as a punitive measure for specifically defined offences. In the past 15 years, scholars, researchers and students of penology and criminology have championed the debate for abolition of death... Continue Reading
CHAPTER ONE INTRODUCTION BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY In the history of political philosophy there have been different views as to what relationship should exist between the citizens and the state in terms of state’s powers, authority compared to individual... Continue Reading
CHAPTER ONE INTRODUCTION BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY In the history of political philosophy there have been different views as to what relationship should exist between the citizens and the state in terms of state’s powers, authority compared to individual rights and liberties. An exponent of totalitarianism for example would want to argue that... Continue Reading
ABSTRACT Recently, corporal punishment has been legally abolished in Zimbabwean schools as well as in other various countries surrounding the world. This is in keeping with the international inclinations of being on familiar terms with the rights of the child specified in the Convention of the Rights of the Child and the Zimbabwean constitution at... Continue Reading
ABSTRACT The Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 chose certain rights to protect under chapter IV and termed them as Fundamental Rights. These rights are chosen to be protected not only by the Constitution, but also by the African Charter on Human and Peoples „Right. Whenever there are breaches of these fundamental rights, the... Continue Reading
This project intends to solve the problem of petition report submission to public government agencies by the members of the general public through the design and implementation of a Proposed Human Rights Violation Act Online Reporting Portal System for case submissions to the Office of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC). The system... Continue Reading
This project intends to solve the problem of petition report submission to public government agencies by the members of the general public through the design and implementation of a Proposed Human Rights Violation Act Online Reporting Portal System for case submissions to the Office of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC). The system... Continue Reading