This article proposes a theory of “representative deliberation” to describe the democratic ideal that jurors seek to practice. Given its long history, the jury does not fit neatly into any one of the most familiar types of democracy, such as direct democracy, representative democracy, or deliberative democracy. However, the jury does hold together elements of all of these theories. In line with direct democracy, we select jurors from the people-at-large. In line with representative democracy, we seek to draw jurors from a representative cross-section of the community. In line with deliberative democracy, jurors talk as well as vote and seek to change one another’s minds. The resulting hybrid is what this article calls “representative delibe...
Fully participatory jury deliberations figure prominently in the idealized view of the American jury...
In the United States, voir dire is viewed as essential to selecting an impartial jury. Judges, lawye...
This Article challenges the accusation that juries are illequipped to do justice in a complex societ...
This article proposes a theory of “representative deliberation” to describe the democratic ideal tha...
Civil jury service should be a potent form of deliberative democracy, creating greater civic engagem...
Juries are tasked with the duty of deliberating and applying the law to the case at hand. But it is ...
Almost from the moment the law is set to paper, it is shaped and refined through acts of interpretat...
Civil jury service should be a potent form of deliberative democracy, creating greater civic engagem...
Approximately 6 percent of criminal juries hang. But, how many dissenters carry the jury, hang the j...
This article explores the controversial issue of jury nullification by reconceptualizing nullificati...
Citizens directly participate in the civil justice system in three ways. They can be sued, they can ...
This Article reports on four federal jury challenges in which the trial judge or defendants retained...
The Framers of the Sixth and Seventh Amendments to the United States Constitution recognized that ju...
Although proponents argue that peremptory challenges make juries more impartial by eliminating “extr...
The jury in the United States is fraught with paradoxes. Even though the number of jury trials in th...
Fully participatory jury deliberations figure prominently in the idealized view of the American jury...
In the United States, voir dire is viewed as essential to selecting an impartial jury. Judges, lawye...
This Article challenges the accusation that juries are illequipped to do justice in a complex societ...
This article proposes a theory of “representative deliberation” to describe the democratic ideal tha...
Civil jury service should be a potent form of deliberative democracy, creating greater civic engagem...
Juries are tasked with the duty of deliberating and applying the law to the case at hand. But it is ...
Almost from the moment the law is set to paper, it is shaped and refined through acts of interpretat...
Civil jury service should be a potent form of deliberative democracy, creating greater civic engagem...
Approximately 6 percent of criminal juries hang. But, how many dissenters carry the jury, hang the j...
This article explores the controversial issue of jury nullification by reconceptualizing nullificati...
Citizens directly participate in the civil justice system in three ways. They can be sued, they can ...
This Article reports on four federal jury challenges in which the trial judge or defendants retained...
The Framers of the Sixth and Seventh Amendments to the United States Constitution recognized that ju...
Although proponents argue that peremptory challenges make juries more impartial by eliminating “extr...
The jury in the United States is fraught with paradoxes. Even though the number of jury trials in th...
Fully participatory jury deliberations figure prominently in the idealized view of the American jury...
In the United States, voir dire is viewed as essential to selecting an impartial jury. Judges, lawye...
This Article challenges the accusation that juries are illequipped to do justice in a complex societ...