This Article builds on an earlier study analyzing bases and rates of removal of women and African-American jurors in a set of South Carolina capital cases decided between 1997 and 2012. We examine and assess additional data from new perspectives in order to establish a more robust, statistically strengthened response to the original research question: whether, and if so, why, prospective women and African-American jurors were disproportionately removed in different stages of jury selection in a set of South Carolina capital cases. The study and the article it builds on add to decades of empirical research exploring the impacts (or lack thereof) of Batson and related jurisprudence on jury selection practices. The findings from the earlier st...
This Article presents an empirical analysis of how race, income inequality, the regional history of ...
This note identifies the overwhelming influence of how the race of the victim and the defendant affe...
The exercise of peremptory challenges remains the least regulated area of jury selection, largely le...
This Article builds on an earlier study analyzing bases and rates of removal of women and African-Am...
An evaluation of four Wake County capital cases from 2014-2018 reveals the disparate effects that th...
The Supreme Court’s May 2016 decision in Foster v. Chatman involved smoking-gun evidence that the St...
African-Americans are overrepresented in felony convictions and, thus, more likely to be excluded fr...
Research shows the mere presence of Blacks on capital juries--on the rare occasions they are seated-...
A disproportionately high number of criminal defendants are black and Latino, and yet trial juries t...
Racism has left an indelible stain on American history and remains a powerful social force that cont...
Among the central issues in scholarship on the American jury is the effect of Batson v. Kentucky (19...
Statistical studies showing unconscious racial bias in capital selection matter under the eighth ame...
This Article, Disparately Seeking Jurors: Disparate Impact and the (Mis)use of Batson, uncovers a ...
The Supreme Court’s inquiry into the constitutionality of the death penalty has overlooked a critica...
Research shows the mere presence of Blacks on capital juries-- on the rare occasions they are seated...
This Article presents an empirical analysis of how race, income inequality, the regional history of ...
This note identifies the overwhelming influence of how the race of the victim and the defendant affe...
The exercise of peremptory challenges remains the least regulated area of jury selection, largely le...
This Article builds on an earlier study analyzing bases and rates of removal of women and African-Am...
An evaluation of four Wake County capital cases from 2014-2018 reveals the disparate effects that th...
The Supreme Court’s May 2016 decision in Foster v. Chatman involved smoking-gun evidence that the St...
African-Americans are overrepresented in felony convictions and, thus, more likely to be excluded fr...
Research shows the mere presence of Blacks on capital juries--on the rare occasions they are seated-...
A disproportionately high number of criminal defendants are black and Latino, and yet trial juries t...
Racism has left an indelible stain on American history and remains a powerful social force that cont...
Among the central issues in scholarship on the American jury is the effect of Batson v. Kentucky (19...
Statistical studies showing unconscious racial bias in capital selection matter under the eighth ame...
This Article, Disparately Seeking Jurors: Disparate Impact and the (Mis)use of Batson, uncovers a ...
The Supreme Court’s inquiry into the constitutionality of the death penalty has overlooked a critica...
Research shows the mere presence of Blacks on capital juries-- on the rare occasions they are seated...
This Article presents an empirical analysis of how race, income inequality, the regional history of ...
This note identifies the overwhelming influence of how the race of the victim and the defendant affe...
The exercise of peremptory challenges remains the least regulated area of jury selection, largely le...