
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode, Michael Arjun Banerjee, a Ph.D. student in Jurisprudence and Social Policy at the University of California, Berkeley, discusses his draft article, "No-Trial Executions: Police Killings, the Eighth Amendment, and Transformative Proceduralism." He begins by explaining that the overwhelming majority of state killings are "no-trial executions," or police killings that occur before a person is arrested. While "post-trial executions" require the rigorous procedure protections mandated by the Eighth Amendment, no-trial executions require only the limited procedural protections provided by the Fourth Amendment. He argues that policing is a form of punishment, so we should view police killings through an Eighth Amendment lens, and require a similarly elevated degree of "transformative procedure," in order to prevent them. You can read a related op-ed by Banerjee here. Banerjee is on Twitter at @MABanerjee.
This episode was hosted by Brian L. Frye, Spears-Gilbert Associate Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of Law. Frye is on Twitter at @brianlfrye.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By CC0/Public Domain4.9
9999 ratings
In this episode, Michael Arjun Banerjee, a Ph.D. student in Jurisprudence and Social Policy at the University of California, Berkeley, discusses his draft article, "No-Trial Executions: Police Killings, the Eighth Amendment, and Transformative Proceduralism." He begins by explaining that the overwhelming majority of state killings are "no-trial executions," or police killings that occur before a person is arrested. While "post-trial executions" require the rigorous procedure protections mandated by the Eighth Amendment, no-trial executions require only the limited procedural protections provided by the Fourth Amendment. He argues that policing is a form of punishment, so we should view police killings through an Eighth Amendment lens, and require a similarly elevated degree of "transformative procedure," in order to prevent them. You can read a related op-ed by Banerjee here. Banerjee is on Twitter at @MABanerjee.
This episode was hosted by Brian L. Frye, Spears-Gilbert Associate Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of Law. Frye is on Twitter at @brianlfrye.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

9,224 Listeners

3,534 Listeners

382 Listeners

1,115 Listeners

6,309 Listeners

5,881 Listeners

15,698 Listeners

5,856 Listeners

3,957 Listeners

1,444 Listeners

3,546 Listeners

65 Listeners

396 Listeners

745 Listeners

2,283 Listeners