RT Article T1 Six US execution methods and the disastrous quest for humaneness JF The Elgar companion to capital punishment and society SP 144 OP 166 A1 Denno, Deborah W. 1952- LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1936241021 AB This chapter examines the history and current status of the United States’ six execution methods: hanging, firing squad, electrocution, lethal gas, lethal injection, and nitrogen hypoxia. While lethal injection remains the most common technique, inmates have continuously challenged injection’s experimental and scientifically dubious procedures on the grounds that they are inhumane and unconstitutional. Indeed, this country’s ongoing transition from one technique to another, then back again, abounds with legislative, judicial, and correctional evidence detailing why each method failed so appreciably to become more civilized than the one it superseded. This chapter concludes that every execution state’s desire to ensure the death penalty’s survival at any cost propels each execution method’s celebrated introduction and disastrous perpetuation. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 163-166 SN 9781803929149 K1 Executions K1 Lethal injection K1 Methods of execution K1 Jurisprudence DO 10.4337/9781803929156.00018