Sentenced to Die: Last Statements and Dying on Death Row
Moments prior to execution, death row inmates are given time to say anything they desire. In these moments, what do inmates find most important to express? This study first examined the context of dying on death row. Conflicts over high death stigma (Silverman, 1994), just world beliefs (Lerner, 1980), system justification needs (Jost & Banaji, 1994), high death salience, lack of control, and facing their own crime were explored. Next, last statements were studied. Six themes, forgiveness, claims of innocence, silence, love/appreciation, activism and after life belief, were found. Lastly, suggestions for future research on death and dying on death row were made, with special attention paid to terror management theory (see Solomon, Greenberg, & Pyszcynski, 2004 for review) and system justification theory (see Jost, Banaji, & Nosek, 2004 for review).
History
School affiliated with
- School of Psychology (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
OMEGA - Journal of Death and DyingVolume
51Issue
4Pages/Article Number
323-336Publisher
SAGE PublicationsExternal DOI
ISSN
0030-2228eISSN
1541-3764Date Accepted
2005-01-04Date of Final Publication
2005-12-01Open Access Status
- Not Open Access