The Relationship Between Past Lynchings and Modern Executions

1666 Words4 Pages

Franklin Zimring (2003) examines the relationship between the history of lynching and current capital punishment in the United States argueing that the link between them is a vigilante tradition. He adequately shows an association between historical lynchings and modern executions, though this paper will show additional evidence that would help strengthen this argument, but other areas of Zimring’s argument are not as well supported. His attitudinal and behavioral measures of modern vigilantism are insufficient and could easily be interpreted as measuring other concepts. Also missing from Zimring’s analysis is an explanation for the transition of executions from representing government control in the past to executions as representing community control in the present. Finally, I argue that Zimring leaves out any meaningful discussion of the role of race in both past lynchings and modern executions. To support my argument, using recent research, I will show how race has played an important role in both past lynchings and modern executions and how the changing form of racial relations may explain the transition from lynchings to legal executions.

Zimring first examines the relationship between past lynchings and modern executions. At the regional level he shows past lynchings were most concentrated in the western and southern regions that currently execute the most people. Zimring then explores if this link holds at the state level. He shows that it does, modern executions are highly concentrated in states with histories of high lynching rates and states with historically low levels of lynchings had lower levels of modern executions.

I agree with Zimring’s assertion that there is a connection between lychings and modern execu...

... middle of paper ...

...sm: The Crystallization of a Kinder, Gentler Anti-Black Ideology.” Pp. 15-44 in Racial Attitudes in the 1990s: Continuity and Change, edited by S.A. Tuch and J. Marten. Greenwood, CT: Praeger.

Jacobs, David and Jason T. Carmichael. 2002. “The Political Sociology of the Death Penalty: A Pooled Time-Series Analysis.” American Sociological Review 67: 109-131.

Jacobs, David, Jason T. Carmichael, and Stephanie Kent. 2005. “Vigilantism, Current Racial Threat and Death Sentences.” American Sociological Review 70: 656-677.

Messner, Steven F., Eric P. Baumer, and Richard Rosenfeld. 2006. “Distrust of Government, the Vigilante Tradition, and Support for Capital Punishment.” Law & Society Review 40: 559-586.

Zimring, Franklin. 2003. “The Vigilante Tradition and Modern Executions.” Chapter 5

in The Contradictions of American Capital Punishment. Oxford University Press.

Open Document