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41 B.C. L. Rev. 1175 (1999-2000)
Killing Kids: The Impact of Domingues v. Nevada on the Juvenile Death Penalty as a Violation of International Law

handle is hein.journals/bclr41 and id is 1187 raw text is: K[LING KIDS: THE IMPACT OF
DOMINGUES V NEVADA ON THE JUVENILE
DEATH PENALTY AS A VIOLATION OF
INTERNATIONAL LAW
Abstract: This Note examines the debate over the legality of the juvenile
death penalty, and concludes that the use of the juvenile death penalty
in the United States represents a flagrant transgression of international
human rights law. Several forms of international law, including a
number of multilateral human rights treaties, customary international
law and jus cogens prohibit the execution of children below the age of
eighteen. The existence of these contrary legal obligations demands
that the United States abandon its vigilante stance and bring its
practices into conformity with the greater international community.
INTRODUCTION
Over the last decade, the issue of juvenile violence has received
significant public attention.1 Tragedies such as those that occurred in
Littleton, Colorado and Little Rock, Arkansas, have generated height-
ened concern over bloodshed amongst America's young. The anger
and pain provoked by these highly publicized displays of juvenile vio-
lence have been reflected in the words and deeds of politicians who
call for tougher approaches to crime and increasingly severe criminal
sanctions.2 As a result, the juvenile justice system, founded on the idea
that childhood is a distinct stage of life, has slowly been dismantled.3
The century-old notion of children and adolescents as less culpable
and more amenable to rehabilitation has given way to a harsher real-
ity where child criminals are frequently indistinguishable from their
I See Victor Streib, TheJuvenile Death Penalty Today: Death Sentences and Executions forfit-
venile Crimes, January 1973-June 2000 (last modified June 2000) <http://www.aw.onu.edu
/faculty/streib/uvdeat.litml>.
2 See Richard Dieter, International Perspectives on the Death Penalty: A Costly Isolation for the
U.S. (last modified Oct. 1999) <http://wNv.deathpenaltyinfo.org/international-report.
html> (noting numerous calls by politicians to lower age of death eligibility, even to as low
as eleven); NATIONAL CAMPAIGN TO ABOLISH THE DEATH PENALTY, The U.S. leads the world
in hilling hids (visited Apr. 15, 2000) <http://ivw.ncadp.org> (noting that in 1996 Missis-
sippi sought the death penalty forjuveniles as young as thirteen).
3 Margaret Talbot, Whqat's Become of the Juvenile Delinquent, N.Y. TIMES MAG., Sept. 10,
2000, at 41.

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