Juries are often thought of as being fair and crucial to producing fair trials. Things such as scientific jury selection (SJS), peremptory challenges, jury size, and jury nullification skew jury verdicts by introducing biases that reflect the attitudes, characteristics, and behaviors of jurors. This paper demonstrates how bias is formed starting during the voir dire process and continuing until the rendering of a verdict. Each bias can lead to wrongful convictions such as conviction of the innocent or acquittal of the guilty. With a system that prides itself on the notion that justice is blind, the bias that is created during the entire process has life altering effects that prove there are flaws within the system
Encounters with the legal system are unevenly distributed throughout the American population, with B...
The current thesis aimed to identify the process through which jurors reach their decisions, and to ...
Prior research by Kaplan and Miller (1978) suggested that juries are generally influenced less by ex...
Juries are often thought of as being fair and crucial to producing fair trials. Things such as scien...
The Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution grants the accused individual the right to a f...
This Article investigates whether one of the most intractable problems in trial procedure can be ame...
Courts and commentators routinely assume that “bias” on the jury encompasses any source of influence...
This Article investigates whether one of the most intractable problems in trial procedure can be ame...
Purpose. The objective of this review was to give a broad overview of various biases associated with...
This article examines how bias and prejudice may impact the decision making process of our judiciary...
The Scottish verdict of not proven represents a second acquittal verdict which is not legally define...
Two experiments examined individual and group decision mak-ing when decision criteria led to outcome...
In 2005, 48,300 state and federal civil jury trials occurred in the United States (National Center f...
Biases in the courtroom come in a variety of forms which, in theory, would be revealed through the j...
Juries in adversarial courts are tasked with several responsibilities. They are asked to: 1) assess ...
Encounters with the legal system are unevenly distributed throughout the American population, with B...
The current thesis aimed to identify the process through which jurors reach their decisions, and to ...
Prior research by Kaplan and Miller (1978) suggested that juries are generally influenced less by ex...
Juries are often thought of as being fair and crucial to producing fair trials. Things such as scien...
The Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution grants the accused individual the right to a f...
This Article investigates whether one of the most intractable problems in trial procedure can be ame...
Courts and commentators routinely assume that “bias” on the jury encompasses any source of influence...
This Article investigates whether one of the most intractable problems in trial procedure can be ame...
Purpose. The objective of this review was to give a broad overview of various biases associated with...
This article examines how bias and prejudice may impact the decision making process of our judiciary...
The Scottish verdict of not proven represents a second acquittal verdict which is not legally define...
Two experiments examined individual and group decision mak-ing when decision criteria led to outcome...
In 2005, 48,300 state and federal civil jury trials occurred in the United States (National Center f...
Biases in the courtroom come in a variety of forms which, in theory, would be revealed through the j...
Juries in adversarial courts are tasked with several responsibilities. They are asked to: 1) assess ...
Encounters with the legal system are unevenly distributed throughout the American population, with B...
The current thesis aimed to identify the process through which jurors reach their decisions, and to ...
Prior research by Kaplan and Miller (1978) suggested that juries are generally influenced less by ex...