The last decades of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth century are typically characterized as the era in which the criminal jury trial came to an end. Although criminal juries did not completely disappear, their role became smaller and smaller across that time frame. Most studies of this phenomenon attribute that decline to the rise of plea bargains in that same period. Specifically, these studies lead to the conclusion that institutional factors, such as case loads and the political pressure on elected prosecutors to be tough on crime, made plea bargains an increasingly attractive option for the State. They are based on the assumption that the rise of plea bargains caused the decline of criminal juries. Yet thi...
Periodically, our society goes through agonizing soulsearching and much hand-wringing about the effi...
Jury practice in the state and federal courts evolved dramatically in the nineteenth and early twent...
Ever since In re Winship in 1970, it is well settled that the Due Process Clause requires a jury to ...
The last decades of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth century are typica...
The last decades of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth century are often ...
This paper proceeds in two parts. The first part is devoted to an historical argument that juries in...
The practical disappearance of the jury trial ranks among the most widely examined topics in America...
This article provides a brief historical explanation of the role that juries have played in Anglo-Am...
In thinking about legal developments, new research findings, and the continuing swirl of controversy...
The common law criminal trial is dominated by the lawyers for prosecution and defense. In the protot...
The vast majority of criminal cases result in guilty pleas, rather than jury verdicts— a situation t...
As late as the eighteenth century, ordinary jury trial at common law was a judge-dominated, lawyer-f...
It is widely agreed that the vast majority of convictions in criminal courts are the result of guil...
This article examines two aspects of the jury system that have attracted far less attention from sch...
This article considers aspects of lay participation in the Irish justice system, focusing on some po...
Periodically, our society goes through agonizing soulsearching and much hand-wringing about the effi...
Jury practice in the state and federal courts evolved dramatically in the nineteenth and early twent...
Ever since In re Winship in 1970, it is well settled that the Due Process Clause requires a jury to ...
The last decades of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth century are typica...
The last decades of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth century are often ...
This paper proceeds in two parts. The first part is devoted to an historical argument that juries in...
The practical disappearance of the jury trial ranks among the most widely examined topics in America...
This article provides a brief historical explanation of the role that juries have played in Anglo-Am...
In thinking about legal developments, new research findings, and the continuing swirl of controversy...
The common law criminal trial is dominated by the lawyers for prosecution and defense. In the protot...
The vast majority of criminal cases result in guilty pleas, rather than jury verdicts— a situation t...
As late as the eighteenth century, ordinary jury trial at common law was a judge-dominated, lawyer-f...
It is widely agreed that the vast majority of convictions in criminal courts are the result of guil...
This article examines two aspects of the jury system that have attracted far less attention from sch...
This article considers aspects of lay participation in the Irish justice system, focusing on some po...
Periodically, our society goes through agonizing soulsearching and much hand-wringing about the effi...
Jury practice in the state and federal courts evolved dramatically in the nineteenth and early twent...
Ever since In re Winship in 1970, it is well settled that the Due Process Clause requires a jury to ...