BOOKS: Abolition, One Man's Battle Against the Death Penalty
A compelling narrative of the legal and political fight to end the
death penalty in France has just been released in an English
translation. Abolition: One Man’s Battle Against the Death Penalty
is authored by Robert Badinter, probably the single person most
responsible for abolishing the death penalty in France. He begins his
story in 1972 when one of his clients was guillotined in a case he felt
was unjust. Upon dedicating his career to abolishing the death penalty,
he agreed to represent any convict facing capital punishment, and he
succeeded in having six death sentences overturned. Readers follow
Badinter’s journey from writing the legislation to ban the death
penalty to the push through the National Assembly and Senate. His
narrative moves from courtroom experiences to the political front
throughout this memoir. Badinter currently sits in the French Senate
and is one of the founders of the World Congress Against the Death
Penalty.
The new edition can be purchased at Amazon.com. (R. Badinter, Abolition: One man’s battle against the death penalty, Northeastern University Press, 2008; translated by Jeremy Mercer). See Books.
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