thesis title about death penalty in the philippines

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The attitude towards the restoration of death penalty among the public prosecutors of Iloilo City

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  • Juris Doctor [144]
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Amnesty International Logotype

DEATH PENALTY

We know that, together, we can end the death penalty everywhere..

Every day, people are executed and sentenced to death by the state as punishment for a variety of crimes – sometimes for acts that should not be criminalized. In some countries, it can be for drug-related offences, in others it is reserved for terrorism-related acts and murder.

Some countries execute people who were under 18 years old when the crime was committed, others use the death penalty against people with mental and intellectual disabilities and several others apply the death penalty after unfair trials – in clear violation of international law and standards. People can spend years on death row, not knowing when their time is up, or whether they will see their families one last time.

The death penalty is the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment. Amnesty opposes the death penalty in all cases without exception – regardless of who is accused, the nature or circumstances of the   crime, guilt or innocence or method of execution.

Amnesty International holds that the death penalty breaches human rights, in particular the right to life and the right to live free from torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. Both rights are protected under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted by the UN in 1948.

Over time, the international community has adopted several instruments that ban the use of the death penalty, including the following:

• The Second Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, aiming at the abolition of the death penalty. • Protocol No. 6 to the European Convention on Human Rights, concerning the abolition of the death penalty, and Protocol No. 13 to the European Convention on Human Rights, concerning the abolition of the death penalty in all circumstances. • The Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights to Abolish the Death Penalty.

Although international law says that the use of the death penalty must be restricted to the the most serious crimes, meaning intentional killing, Amnesty believes that the death penalty is never the answer.

The death penalty is a symptom of a culture of violence, not a solution to it.

Execution Methods

• Beheading • Electrocution • Hanging • Lethal injection • Shooting

WHERE DO MOST EXECUTIONS TAKE PLACE?

In 2022, most known executions took place in China, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and the USA – in that order.

China remained the world’s leading executioner  – but the true extent of its use of the death penalty is unknown as this data is classified as a state secret; the global figure of at least  883  excludes the thousands of executions believed to have been carried out there.

Excluding China, 90% of all reported executions took place in just three countries – Iran, Saudi Arabia and Egypt.

The global view: death sentences and executions 2008-2022

*This map indicates the general locations of boundaries and jurisdictions and should not be interpreted as Amnesty International’s view on disputed territories.

**Country names listed reflect nomenclature in May 2023

Juvenile Executions

The use of the death penalty for crimes committed by people younger than 18 is prohibited under international human rights law, yet some countries still sentence to death and execute juvenile defendants. Such executions are few compared to the total number of executions recorded by Amnesty International each year.

However, their significance goes beyond their number and calls into question the commitment of the executing states to respect international law.

Since 1990 Amnesty International has documented at least 149 executions of child offenders in 10 countries: China, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Iran, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, South Sudan, Sudan, the USA and Yemen.

Several of these countries have changed their laws to exclude the practice. Iran has executed more than twice as many child offenders as the other nine countries combined. At the time of writing Iran has executed at least 99 child offenders since 1990.

Executions per year

Amnesty International recorded at least 657 executions in 20 countries in 2018, down by 5% from 2018 (at least 690 executions). This figure represents the lowest number of executions that Amnesty International has recorded in at least a decade.

Death sentences per year

Amnesty International recorded at least 2,307 death sentences in 56 countries in 2019, a slight decrease from the total of 2,531 reported in 2018. At least 26,604 people were known to be under sentence of death globally at the end of 2019.

HOW MANY DEATH SENTENCES AND EXECUTIONS TAKE PLACE EACH YEAR?

Death sentences.

Amnesty International recorded at least 2,052 death sentences in 56 countries in 2021, an increase of 39% from the total of 1,477 reported in 2020. At least 28,670 people were known to be under sentence of death globally at the end of 2021.

Amnesty International recorded at least 579 executions in 18 countries in 2021, up by 20% from 2020 (at least 483 executions). This figure represents the second lowest number of executions that Amnesty International has recorded since at least 2010.

Reasons to abolish the death penalty

It is irreversible and mistakes happen. Execution is the ultimate, irrevocable punishment: the risk of executing an innocent person can never be eliminated. Since 1973, for example, more than 160 prisoners sent to death row in the USA have later been exonerated or released from death row on grounds of innocence. Others have been executed despite serious doubts about their guilt.

It does not deter crime. Countries who execute commonly cite the death penalty as a way to deter people from committing crime. This claim has been repeatedly discredited, and there is no evidence that the death penalty is any more effective in reducing crime than life imprisonment.

It is often used within skewed justice systems. In many cases recorded by Amnesty International, people were executed after being convicted in grossly unfair trials, on the basis of torture-tainted evidence and with inadequate legal representation. In some countries death sentences are imposed as the mandatory punishment for certain offences, meaning that judges are not able to consider the circumstances of the crime or of the defendant before sentencing.

It is discriminatory. The weight of the death penalty is disproportionally carried by those with less advantaged socio-economic backgrounds or belonging to a racial, ethnic or religious minority. This includes having limited access to legal representation, for example, or being at greater disadvantage in their experience of the criminal justice system.

It is used as a political tool. The authorities in some countries, for example Iran and Sudan, use the death penalty to punish political opponents.

What is Amnesty doing to abolish the death penalty?

For 40 years, Amnesty has been campaigning to abolish the death penalty around the world.

Amnesty monitors its use by all states to expose and hold to account governments that continue to use the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment. We publish a report annually, reporting figures and analysing trends for each country. Amnesty’s latest report, Death Sentences and Executions 2019, was released in April 2020.

The organisation’s work to oppose the death penalty takes many forms, including targeted, advocacy and campaign based projects in the Africa, Asia-Pacific, Americas and Europe and Central Asia region; strengthening national and international standards against its use, including by supporting the successful adoption of resolutions on a moratorium on the use of the death penalty by the UN General Assembly; and applying pressure on cases that face imminent execution. We also support actions and work by the abolitionist movement, at national, regional and global level.

When Amnesty started its work in 1977, only 16 countries had totally abolished the death penalty. Today, that number has risen to 106 – more than half the world’s countries. More than two-thirds are abolitionist in law or practice.

In the Philippines

More than a decade ago, the Philippines recognized that the capital punishment is the ultimate violation of the right to life by abolishing the Republic Act 7659, later ratifying the Second Optional Protocol to the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights which further emphasized the cruel and inhuman nature of capital punishment. Since the start of President Duterte’s term in 2016 however, he has sought to reinstate the death penalty, and almost succeeded when the House of Representatives voted to pass the bill in 2017.

Today, we call on the Philippine Senate to reject any and all proposals for the reinstatement of the death penalty. Call on our Senators to recognize that the death penalty fails as a deterrent to any form of crime and contributes to a culture that continually devalues life.

Recorded executions skyrocket to highest figure in five years

The death penalty is an inhumane, unlawful and ineffective response to drugs, death penalty myths debunked.

WCADP

Campaigning

Keep the Death Penalty Abolished in the Philippines (Tagalog) By World Coalition Against Death Penalty, on 23 March 2021

Drug Offenses

This brochure was developed by the World Coalition Against the Death Penalty with the Commission on the Human Rights in the Philippines. It explains why the death penalty risks returning in the Philippines and the reasons against its resurgence. It is available in 11 languages of the Philippines, plus French and English.

flag

Philippines

Abolitionist for all crimes Death penalty legal status

21st World Day against the death penalty poster

21st World Day Against the Death Penalty – The death penalty: An irreversible torture

Moratorium poster

Helping the World Achieve a Moratorium on Executions

In 2007, the World Coalition made one of the most important decisions in its young history: to support the Resolution of the United Nations General Assembly for a moratorium on the use of the death penalty as a step towards universal abolition. A moratorium is temporary suspension of executions and, more rarely, of death sentences. […]

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  1. (DOC) Should we estabilized the death penalty in the Philippines

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  2. (DOC) POSITION PAPER OF PRO-LIFE PHILIPPINES FOUNDATION, INC. ON THE

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COMMENTS

  1. Death Penalty in the Philippines: Evidence on Economics and Efficacy

    However, the literature suggests that there is still no clear and credible empirical evidence to back the argument that the death penalty is a crime deterrent. Furthermore, this paper examined the potential drivers of the growing death penalty support in the Philippines and the possible implications of reinstating the death penalty in the ...

  2. Death Penalty: A Position Paper

    The death penalty has been long known in the Philippines, way back to when the country was colonized by the Spaniards and Americans. Although it has already been abolished two times before, the government began considering bills to reinstate the death penalty once again.

  3. The acceptance towards the restoration of the death penalty among law

    Those respondents who do not accept the restoration of the death penalty believe that (1) It is not a deterrent to crimes, (2) It is against morals, and (3) It does not discourage criminals from committing crime. 15 out of the 41 respondents who accept the restoration of the death penalty were male while the other 26 were female. 7 out of the ...

  4. Death Penalty Danger in the Philippines

    In 2007, the Philippines ratified the Second Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which requires countries to abolish the death penalty.

  5. The attitude towards the restoration of death penalty among the public

    Based on the answers solicited from the respondents through the questionnaire, the majority or 53.85% of all the public prosecutors in the City of Iloilo who participated in the survey agreed to restore the death penalty as punishment for heinous crimes. The top reasons for such a view are: (1) It poses as deterrence in the commission of the ...

  6. How We Kill: Notes on the Death Penalty in the Philippines

    Authors: Joel Ariate. University of the Philippines. A look at the history of the killing of convicts in the Philippines yields the lesson that a state relying on murder as a tool to impose its ...

  7. PDF DRAFT UPR Report on Death Penalty in the Philippines March 2022

    In 2006, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo abolished the death penalty.1 Since then, however, lawmakers have introduced numerous bills to reinstate the death penalty, with the House adopting Bill No. 7814 as recently as March 2, 2021.2. The report examines the current state of the death penalty in the Philippines, including (1) acceptance of ...

  8. Philippines: The Death Penalty: Criminality, Justice and Human Rights

    Torture and other ill-treatment. Research. This document contains some information and recommendations on the Death Penalty which was restored by the Philippines Government in December 1993. The organization urges the President of the Philippines to exercise clemency in the case of those death row prisoners whose sentences have been confirmed ...

  9. PDF Philippines: Abolition of the death penalty

    In 1987 the Philippines set an historic precedent by becoming the first Asian country in modern times to abolish the death penalty for all crimes. However, the death penalty was reintroduced in the Philippines in late 1993 for 46 different offences. Executions resumed in 1999 until former President Estrada in 2000 announced a moratorium on ...

  10. Capital punishment in the Philippines

    Capital punishment in the Philippines (Filipino: Parusang Kamatayan sa Pilipinas) specifically, the death penalty, as a form of state-sponsored repression, was introduced and widely practiced by the Spanish government in the Philippines.A substantial number of Filipino national martyrs like Mariano Gómez, José Burgos, and Jacinto Zamora (also known as GomBurZa), Thirteen Martyrs of Cavite ...

  11. DEATH PENALTY

    The death penalty is the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment. Amnesty opposes the death penalty in all cases without exception - regardless of who is accused, the nature or circumstances of the crime, guilt or innocence or method of execution. Amnesty International holds that the death penalty breaches human rights, in particular ...

  12. Death Penalty in The Philippines, A Comparative Study

    of the Death Penalty Law (Republic Act No. 7659), in relation to the Lethal. Injection Law (R.A. 8177). The Philippine Supreme Court noted: 1. The death penalty is not a cruel, unjust, excessive or unusual. punishment. It is an exercise of the states power to secure society against. the threatened and actual evil. 2.

  13. A Thesis Statement For Death Penalty

    2. The death penalty is proven to have no deterrent effect on crimes 3. The death penalty is disadvantageous and biased towards the lower class of the society. 4. The criminal justice and judicial systems in the Philippines are proven to be flawed and susceptible to mistakes. III.

  14. Argumentative essay about death penalty in the philippine pdf

    This persuasive essay will examine both sides of the argument and attempt to come to a conclusion on the death penalty in the Philippines. To begin, let us look at why proponents argue for the death penalty as an effective deterrent. Supporters contend that it sends a powerful message to potential criminals and deters them from committing ...

  15. PDF Re-Imposition of Death Penalty: A Criminal Justice Agents' Perspective

    5. If death penalty be re-imposed, there will be an elimination of criminal mind among those persons-at-risk. 3.14 Agree 4 Composite Mean 3.15 Agree Table 2 showed the extent of the advantages of the re-imposition of death penalty. It can be viewed that the extent of the advantages of the re-imposition of death penalty was identified to

  16. Governing through Killing: The War on Drugs in the Philippines

    The Philippines has abolished the death penalty twice: in 1987, after dictator Ferdinand Marcos fell from power, and then again (after the death penalty was reinstated in 1993) in 2006, following a push by the Roman Catholic Church and President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. ... Time magazine featured a smiling Duterte on its cover under the title ...

  17. Thesis Statement For Death Penalty

    979 Words. 4 Pages. Open Document. TITLE: Rejecting Death Penalty. Thesis Statement: Death Penalty should not be implemented here in the Philippines, because this is not a proper way to punish having death penalty for any person made crime. Problem: Should we legalize Death Penalty here in the Philippines. I. Introduction: Description of Death ...

  18. Legalization of Death Penalty

    Legalization of Death Penalty. Thesis Statement: I disagree with the legalization of death penalty because of the fact that our legal justice system is crumbling and biased. The legalization of the death penalty in the Philippines is a highly controversial issue. Taking a life for a life doesn't affect the decline of crime rates here in ...

  19. A Position Paper About Death Penalty in Philippines

    A Position Paper about Death Penalty in Philippines - Read online for free. This document presents arguments for and against the death penalty in the Philippines. It notes that the death penalty is currently legal under Republic Act No. 7659 but some argue it violates a person's right to life. Supporters believe it deters serious crimes, while opponents argue it does not deter and encourages ...

  20. A Position Paper On The Death Penalty in The Philippines

    A-Position-Paper-on-the-Death-Penalty-in-the-Philippines - Read online for free.

  21. Keep the Death Penalty Abolished in the Philippines (Tagalog)

    21st World Day Against the Death Penalty - The death penalty: An irreversible torture. Helping the World Achieve a Moratorium on Executions. In 2007, the World Coalition made one of the most important decisions in its young history: to support the Resolution of the United Nations General Assembly for a moratorium on the use of the death penalty as a step towards universal abolition.

  22. Death Penalty in the Philippines Free Essay Example

    Death Penalty in the Philippines. Categories: Death penalty Philippines. Download. Essay, Pages 17 (4206 words) Views. 6036. 1987 . But six yearsafter it has reimposed the death penalty, the Philippines has overtaken its Asian neighbors and hasthe most number of death convicts.Within less than a year, however, the military establishment was ...