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46 Cardozo L. Rev. 1 (2024-2025)

handle is hein.journals/cdozo46 and id is 1 raw text is: 









   WOMEN ON DEATH ROW IN THE UNITED STATES


      Sandra  Babcock,   Nathalie  Greenfield, and  Kathryn   Adamsont




      This Article presents a comprehensive study of forty-eight persons sentenced
to death between 1990 and 2022  who were legally recognized as women at the time
of their trials. Our research is the first of its kind to conduct a holistic and
intersectional analysis of the factors driving women's death sentences. It reveals
commonalities  across women's cases, delving into their experiences ofmotherhood,
gender-based  violence (GBV),  and prior  involvement  with the criminal legal
system. We  also explore the nature of the women's crimes of conviction, including
the role of male codefendants and the state's use of aggravating factors. Finally, we
reveal for the first time the extent to which capital prosecutions are dominated by
men-including judges, elected district   attorneys, defense attorneys, and juror
forepersons.

      We  present our data against the backdrop of prevalent theories that seek to
explain both the rarity of women's executions and the reasons why certain women
are singled out for the harshest punishment provided bylaw. We explain why those
frameworks  are inadequate to understand the role that systemic gender bias plays in
women's  capital prosecutions. We conclude by arguing for more nuanced  research
that embraces  the complexities in women's   capital cases and accounts  for the
presence of systemic and intersectional discrimination.




   t Sandra Babcock is a Clinical Professor of Law at Cornell Law School. Nathalie Greenfield is
an Adjunct Professor of Law at Cornell Law School and an Associate Attorney and Mitigation
Specialist at Phillips Black, Inc. Kathryn Adamson is a consultant with the Center on Gender and
Extreme Sentencing and the Cornell Center on the Death Penalty Worldwide. We wish, first and
foremost, to thank the women on death row who have shared their experiences with us. We are also
very grateful to the numerous capital post-conviction lawyers who provided critical information
and documents that allowed us to carry out this research. Thank you to our Cornell faculty
colleagues, especially John Blume, Sheri Johnson, and Jeff Rachlinski, who provided valuable
feedback. Thanks also to our excellent cohort of researchers and colleagues who helped us analyze
our data and  think through methodological questions, including Maci East, Jacqueline
Groskaufmanis, Randi Kepecs, Paulina Lucio Maymon, Gabriela Markolovic, and Sofia L6pez
Cartagena.


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