Abstract: Legal processes have a theatrical component to them. They offer an audience- the spectators- and actors- the legal parties, lawyers, as well as the jury and judge- who perform a play on the stage of the courtroom. In this paper we focus on the role of the jury, which appears to simultaneously be audience and actor. As audience, it assures that the power of the judge is limited. As actor, the jury is able to play its role in such a way as to incorporate social attitudes into the verdict. Exploring this theatrical component may shed new light on the debate whether juries are a “good ” way of finding legal settlements. Further, it could indicate how legal processes are perceived by the public. As our line of argument builds on Adam S...
Numerous American films have portrayed jurors who make difficult decisions together in order to fair...
The right of audience, in common law, is the right of a lawyer to represent a client in a court. ...
Widely known for its famous soliloquies, Shakespeare’s Hamlet is often argued to stress the importan...
Jury, Legal proceedings, Adam Smith, Impartial spectator, Theatre, A13, B12, B30, K40, Z0,
Theatre and law are not so different. Generally, researchers work on the art of theatre, the rhetori...
The Justice Syndicate (TJS) is an interactive performance, featuring an audience who become jurors c...
This paper considers the similarities between Adam Smith's device of the impartial spectator and the...
The audiences of early modern English drama were multiple, and they intersected with the legal syste...
This book chapter discusses William Blackstone's role as a judge, in relation to accounts (such as B...
This dissertation explores the concept of audience in contemporary theories of legal interpretation,...
Based on a findings of a simulation study in which 160 members of the public observed a mini rape tr...
This article raises new questions about the meaning of juror participation in a criminal trial. Thro...
Almost from the moment the law is set to paper, it is shaped and refined through acts of interpretat...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the University of Wollongong via the URL in...
Theatrical practices in the courtrooms of the United States and Great Britain are examined in this a...
Numerous American films have portrayed jurors who make difficult decisions together in order to fair...
The right of audience, in common law, is the right of a lawyer to represent a client in a court. ...
Widely known for its famous soliloquies, Shakespeare’s Hamlet is often argued to stress the importan...
Jury, Legal proceedings, Adam Smith, Impartial spectator, Theatre, A13, B12, B30, K40, Z0,
Theatre and law are not so different. Generally, researchers work on the art of theatre, the rhetori...
The Justice Syndicate (TJS) is an interactive performance, featuring an audience who become jurors c...
This paper considers the similarities between Adam Smith's device of the impartial spectator and the...
The audiences of early modern English drama were multiple, and they intersected with the legal syste...
This book chapter discusses William Blackstone's role as a judge, in relation to accounts (such as B...
This dissertation explores the concept of audience in contemporary theories of legal interpretation,...
Based on a findings of a simulation study in which 160 members of the public observed a mini rape tr...
This article raises new questions about the meaning of juror participation in a criminal trial. Thro...
Almost from the moment the law is set to paper, it is shaped and refined through acts of interpretat...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the University of Wollongong via the URL in...
Theatrical practices in the courtrooms of the United States and Great Britain are examined in this a...
Numerous American films have portrayed jurors who make difficult decisions together in order to fair...
The right of audience, in common law, is the right of a lawyer to represent a client in a court. ...
Widely known for its famous soliloquies, Shakespeare’s Hamlet is often argued to stress the importan...