The participation of lay jurors in criminal courts has known much ebb and flow both in France and in Belgium. These two countries belong to the civil law tradition, where juries are the exception rather than the rule in criminal trials, and they only exist in criminal cases, not civil cases. In spite of some similarities, there are substantial differences between the two countries, and their systems will be examined in turn. In France, the Cour d’assises itself was inherited from the French Revolution. Since a law of 1941, it is a mixed jury system, meaning that lay citizens sit together with professional judges, The Cour adjudicates severe crimes only, mostly rapes and murders. A pilot program extended lay participation to criminal courts ...
This paper furnishes jury system information about the twenty-eight democracies (excluding the Unite...
Drawing on a second survey of lay adjudication in Europe conducted by the authors in 2011-2012, this...
In the aftermath of de-stabilizing conflicts, the transition to sustainable democracy is a challengi...
The participation of lay jurors in criminal courts has known much ebb and flow both in France and in...
Since its inception, the French jury system has generated controversy and passionate argument. The j...
End of the XX century showed that almost all European countries have failed in the suppression of th...
“Juries, Lay Judges, and Trials” describes the widespread practice of including ordinary citizens as...
France has never adopted the principle of jury trials in civil cases. For criminal trials, it was in...
This article uses the European Court of Human Rights judgment of Taxquet v. Belgium, decided by the ...
This qualitative article provides findings on the possibility of implementing the France Cour de Ass...
France has never adopted the principle of jury trials in civil cases. For criminal trials, it was in...
Anglo‐American guilty pleas have inspired criminal justice reformers in many inquisitorially based s...
The jury in the United States is fraught with paradoxes. Even though the number of jury trials in th...
The jury is experiencing a renaissance worldwide. Countries that have never had a jury system, or ha...
What is the effect of introducing jury members in criminal courts? While surveys regularly point out...
This paper furnishes jury system information about the twenty-eight democracies (excluding the Unite...
Drawing on a second survey of lay adjudication in Europe conducted by the authors in 2011-2012, this...
In the aftermath of de-stabilizing conflicts, the transition to sustainable democracy is a challengi...
The participation of lay jurors in criminal courts has known much ebb and flow both in France and in...
Since its inception, the French jury system has generated controversy and passionate argument. The j...
End of the XX century showed that almost all European countries have failed in the suppression of th...
“Juries, Lay Judges, and Trials” describes the widespread practice of including ordinary citizens as...
France has never adopted the principle of jury trials in civil cases. For criminal trials, it was in...
This article uses the European Court of Human Rights judgment of Taxquet v. Belgium, decided by the ...
This qualitative article provides findings on the possibility of implementing the France Cour de Ass...
France has never adopted the principle of jury trials in civil cases. For criminal trials, it was in...
Anglo‐American guilty pleas have inspired criminal justice reformers in many inquisitorially based s...
The jury in the United States is fraught with paradoxes. Even though the number of jury trials in th...
The jury is experiencing a renaissance worldwide. Countries that have never had a jury system, or ha...
What is the effect of introducing jury members in criminal courts? While surveys regularly point out...
This paper furnishes jury system information about the twenty-eight democracies (excluding the Unite...
Drawing on a second survey of lay adjudication in Europe conducted by the authors in 2011-2012, this...
In the aftermath of de-stabilizing conflicts, the transition to sustainable democracy is a challengi...