RT Article T1 To Reinstate or to Not Reinstate? An Exploratory Study of Student Perspectives on the Death Penalty in Michigan JF International journal of offender therapy and comparative criminology VO 62 IS 1 SP 229 OP 252 A1 Adinkrah, Mensah A1 Clemens, William M. A2 Clemens, William M. LA English YR 2018 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1587653575 AB The U.S. state of Michigan abolished the death penalty in 1846. Since then, several abortive efforts have been made by state legislators to re-establish the death sentence to deal with convicted murderers. Concurrently, some support exists among Michigan residents for the restoration of capital punishment in the state. This article presents the results of the analysis of an attitudinal survey of 116 college students enrolled in three criminal justice courses in a Michigan public university concerning the reinstatement of the death sentence in the state. The data from this exploratory study show that a slight majority (52.6%) of respondents favored reinstatement whereas 45.7% opposed restoration. Advocates and opponents of re-establishment of the death penalty in Michigan provided similar religious, moral and economic arguments proffered by others in previous surveys on capital punishment available in the death penalty literature. The current study makes a contribution to the scant extant literature on attitudes toward the death penalty in abolitionist jurisdictions. As this body of literature grows, it can provide baseline data or information with which to compare attitudes in retentionist states. K1 Death penalty K1 Capital punishment K1 Michigan K1 Reinstatement K1 University students K1 Todesstrafe K1 Wiedereinführung K1 Umfrage K1 Argumente DO 10.1177/0306624X16643743