In the United States, voir dire is viewed as essential to selecting an impartial jury. Judges, lawyers, and the public fervently believe that a fair trial depends on distinguishing between prospective jurors who are impartial and those who are not. However, in England, Australia, and Canada, there are impartial jury trials without voir dire. This article challenges the assumption that prospective jurors enter the courtroom as either impartial or partial and that voir dire will reveal the impartial ones. Though voir dire fails as an “impartiality detector,” this article explores how voir dire contributes to the trial process in two critical, but unacknowledged, ways. First, voir dire helps to transform “reluctant citizens,” who might have bi...
Giving attorneys more power in the voir dire (jury selection) process may allow them to 1) find grou...
Although proponents argue that peremptory challenges make juries more impartial by eliminating “extr...
It is probably no exaggeration to state that many cases are won or lost on the jury selection. Every...
In the United States, voir dire is viewed as essential to selecting an impartial jury. Judges, lawye...
During jury selection, many courts adopt a minimal approach to voir dire questioning, asking a small...
Voir dire is the stage of a jury trial at which prospective jurors are questioned under oath by cour...
The present study asked two important questions: Does prejudicial pretrial publicity produce bias wh...
Whether judges and attorneys are able to detect bias among potential jurors (venirepersons) is a piv...
This study of individualized jury selection for 792 potentialjurors across 12 North Carolina capital...
The legal system relies on voir dire to ensure the Sixth Amendment guarantee of an impartial jury. T...
Over the last four decades, trial consultants have become integral members of the venire process. Be...
Although the voir dire of jurors is one of the most significant mechanisms by which an impartial jur...
Jury selection is a cornerstone of the pre-trial preparations done before all cases. The voir dire p...
Courts and commentators routinely assume that “bias” on the jury encompasses any source of influence...
One of the hallmarks of the American judicial system is the concept of trial by jury, and for said t...
Giving attorneys more power in the voir dire (jury selection) process may allow them to 1) find grou...
Although proponents argue that peremptory challenges make juries more impartial by eliminating “extr...
It is probably no exaggeration to state that many cases are won or lost on the jury selection. Every...
In the United States, voir dire is viewed as essential to selecting an impartial jury. Judges, lawye...
During jury selection, many courts adopt a minimal approach to voir dire questioning, asking a small...
Voir dire is the stage of a jury trial at which prospective jurors are questioned under oath by cour...
The present study asked two important questions: Does prejudicial pretrial publicity produce bias wh...
Whether judges and attorneys are able to detect bias among potential jurors (venirepersons) is a piv...
This study of individualized jury selection for 792 potentialjurors across 12 North Carolina capital...
The legal system relies on voir dire to ensure the Sixth Amendment guarantee of an impartial jury. T...
Over the last four decades, trial consultants have become integral members of the venire process. Be...
Although the voir dire of jurors is one of the most significant mechanisms by which an impartial jur...
Jury selection is a cornerstone of the pre-trial preparations done before all cases. The voir dire p...
Courts and commentators routinely assume that “bias” on the jury encompasses any source of influence...
One of the hallmarks of the American judicial system is the concept of trial by jury, and for said t...
Giving attorneys more power in the voir dire (jury selection) process may allow them to 1) find grou...
Although proponents argue that peremptory challenges make juries more impartial by eliminating “extr...
It is probably no exaggeration to state that many cases are won or lost on the jury selection. Every...