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Native Americans and the Death Penalty
December 27, 2007 David Baker has written a thorough and insightful
analysis of how the death penalty in the U.S. has been used against Native
Americans. In "American Indian Executions in Historical
Context," Baker places the execution of Native Americans within the
history of colonialism, slavery and the conquering of indigenous tribes
in early America. The article traces these developments to the current
era, about which the author concludes: The trend in American Indian executions during the present historical period of self determination shows a significant increase in Indian executions during the 1990s. The 15 American Indian executions since 1973, in many cases, accent the problems endemic to contemporary capital punishment schemes—increasing rates of voluntary executions, botched executions, racist prosecutorial discretion, and ineffective capital defense counsel. In these cases, all the victims were white and the American Indian defendants largely suffered from severe alcoholism, drug abuse, and mental illness. In most cases, defendants came from predictable backgrounds of abject poverty, alcoholic and abusive parents, and violent family histories.David Baker is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Riverside Community College in California. He has also collected a comprehensive list of all executions of Native Americans in U.S. history. (20 Criminal Justice Studies 315–373 (No. 4, December 2007)). Read the article.
Source: Death Penalty Information Center
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