<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
      <oai_dc:dc xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
xmlns:oai_dc="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/">
      <dc:title>Multistate Analysis of Time Consumption in Capital Appeals, 1992-2002</dc:title>
		
      		<dc:creator>Latzer, Barry</dc:creator>
      	
      		<dc:creator>Cauthen, James N.G.</dc:creator>
      	
		
      		<dc:subject>appeal procedures</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>appellate courts</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>capital punishment</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>case processing</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>certiorari</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>death row inmates</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>disposition (legal)</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>executions</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>judicial decisions</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>murderers</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>sentence review</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>sentencing</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>Supreme Court decisions</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>state supreme courts</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>United States Supreme Court</dc:subject>
      	
		
      		<dc:subject>ICPSR.XVII.E</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>NACJD.VII</dc:subject>
      	
      	<dc:description>Despite public controversy over the length of death penalty
 appeals, little empirical work has been done on the time allocated to
 the capital appeals process. The purpose of this study was to perform
 a multistate empirical analysis of the time expended in direct appeals
 of capital cases. The researchers included decisions from 14 states
 that they believed to be representative of the 37 states that have
 enforceable death penalty laws. For each of the 14 states included in
 the study, the researchers examined every capital case decided on
 direct appeal by the courts of last resort between the dates January
 1, 1992, and December 31, 2002. The researchers developed a case
 database by examining a variety of sources. For each of the 1,676
 cases in the multistate database, the research team collected time
 consumption data for each of the following five phases of the direct
 appeal process: (1) the postsentence stage, (2) the preparation stage,
 (3) the argument stage, (4) the decision stage, and (5) the supreme
 court stage. Variables include state, case characteristics, court
opinion variables, dates, and time consumption variables.</dc:description>
		
      	<dc:date>2008-03-25</dc:date>
	    
      		<dc:type>administrative records data</dc:type>
      	
      	<dc:identifier>21680</dc:identifier>
      	<dc:identifier>10.3886/ICPSR21680.v1</dc:identifier>
    	
      		<dc:source><p>Data were obtained from the following sources:</p>
 <list type="bulleted">
 <itm>The clerk's office of each state court of last resort</itm>
 <itm>Online legal databases (Westlaw and Nexis)</itm>
 <itm>Data on direct appeal produced by Liebman, et al. (2002)</itm>
 <itm>The state supreme court clerks' offices</itm>
 <itm>The trial court clerks' offices</itm>
 <itm>Appelate briefs</itm>
 <itm>World Wide Web</itm>
</list></dc:source>
      	
    	
      		<dc:coverage>Arizona</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>Florida</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>Georgia</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>Kentucky</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>Missouri</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>Nevada</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>New Jersey</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>North Carolina</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>Ohio</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>South Carolina</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>Tennessee</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>Texas</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>Virginia</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>Washington</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>United States</dc:coverage>
      	
		
      		<dc:coverage>1992-01-01--2002-12-31</dc:coverage>
      	
      	<dc:rights> ICPSR metadata records are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 
        3.0 United States License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/).</dc:rights>
      </oai_dc:dc>
