UD Home | UDaily | UDaily-Alumni | UDaily-Parents


HIGHLIGHTS
UD called 'epicenter' of 2008 presidential race

Refreshed look for 'UDaily'

Fire safety training held for Residence Life staff

New Enrollment Services Building open for business

UD Outdoor Pool encourages kids to do summer reading

UD in the News

UD alumnus Biden selected as vice presidential candidate

Top Obama and McCain strategists are UD alums

Campanella named alumni relations director

Alum trains elephants at Busch Gardens

Police investigate robbery of student

UD delegation promotes basketball in India

Students showcase summer service-learning projects

First UD McNair Ph.D. delivers keynote address

Research symposium spotlights undergraduates

Steiner named associate provost for interdisciplinary research initiatives

More news on UDaily

Subscribe to UDaily's email services


UDaily is produced by the Office of Public Relations
The Academy Building
105 East Main St.
Newark, DE 19716-2701
(302) 831-2791

Prof to address NAACP Legal Defense Fund

Benjamin Fleury-Steiner
4:23 p.m., June 29, 2005--Benjamin Fleury-Steiner, University of Delaware assistant professor of sociology and criminal justice, will be one of two featured speakers at the NAACP Legal Defense Fund's annual criminal justice conference, to be held Friday, July 22, in Airlie, Va.

Fleury-Steiner and Bryan Stevenson, executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative of Alabama, will discuss recent decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court concerning racial discrimination in jury selection. The Supreme Court has, for the second time in as many years, overturned the death sentence of an African-American prisoner in Texas because prosecutors engaged in racial profiling during jury selection, unfairly stacking juries with whites

“This is an unbelievable honor,” Fleury-Steiner said of his selection as a speaker at the conference. “The NAACP Legal Defense Fund is an organization of some of the most committed, selfless people alive. I cannot think of a more important honor than this, for me personally.”

Fleury-Steiner is the author of the book Jurors’ Stories of Death: How America’s Death Penalty Invests in Inequality, which was published in 2004 by the University of Michigan Press.

In the book, which draws on interviews with jurors through the Capital Jury Project, Fleury-Steiner argues that the death penalty is unfairly stacked against African-American defendants because American society remains mired in racial stereotypes.

The presentation before the Legal Defense Fund will center on the book, with a discussion of how juries are selected and how jurors behave in capital cases, particularly those involving a white victim and an African-American defendant.

Fleury-Steiner said that, historically, prosecutors have kept African-Americans off juries in these cases. When African-Americans are included as jurors, they are often a minority of one.

As such, he said he believes that death penalty cases are inextricably entwined with the continuing civil rights movement. “Some people argue that the death penalty is a separate issue from that of equal justice in America, but I see it as an important part of the struggle for equal justice,” Fleury-Steiner said.

The NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s work in putting the death penalty issue “in the context of the civil rights movement” has long been admired by Fleury-Steiner. “These have been heroes of mine for many years,” he said. “Their struggle is something that I find quite incredible.”

Fleury-Steiner received his doctorate in sociology from Northeastern University, where he also earned a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice and a master’s degree in sociology. He joined the UD faculty in 2000.

Stevenson, who will join Fleury-Steiner as a featured speaker, is a professor of clinical law at the New York University School of Law in addition to his work with the Equal Justice Initiative. He said of the book Jurors’ Stories of Death, “This illuminating and insightful examination of jury deliberations makes a terrific contribution to the study of capital punishment.”

Article by Neil Thomas
Photo by Kevin Quinlan

  E-mail this article

To learn how to subscribe to UDaily, click here.