Kevin Donohue

2487 days ago

The decline of lynching in America coincided with the increased use of capital punishment often following accelerated, unreliable legal processes in state courts. By the end of the 1930s, court-ordered executions outpaced lynchings in the former slave states for the first time. Two thirds of those executed that decade were black, and the trend continued: as African-Americans fell to just 22 percent of the southern population between 1910 and 1950, they constituted 75 percent of those executed.

A Presumption of Guilt

nybooks.com

Bryan Stevenson is the Executive Director of the Equal Justice Initiative and the author of Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption. His essay in this issue is drawn from the collection Policing the Black Man: Arrest, Prosecution, and Imprisonment, edited and with an introduction by Angela J.