124 Seeing Is Believing: The Impact of Jury Service on Attitudes Toward Legal Institutions and the Implications for International Jury Reform
As juries in the U.S. and other parts of the world have increasingly come under attack, many countri...
During the past decade, state jury reform commissions, many individual federal and state judges, and...
In Japan, the idea of citizen involvement in the judicial process has gained greater acceptance over...
124 Seeing Is Believing: The Impact of Jury Service on Attitudes Toward Legal Institutions and the I...
The United States jury system is unique in the world in the frequency of its use and its symbolic si...
The Japanese seeking to involve their citizens in the judicial system as well establishing a check o...
Kiss analyzes whether the readoption of criminal jury trials in present-day Japan would be feasible ...
In many countries, lay people participate as decision makers in legal cases. Some countries include ...
The jury is integral to the American experience of democracy and yet it appears to be under attack. ...
In reviewing debates and research evidence about jury trials for our book, American Juries: The Verd...
Japan\u27s new mixed jury system (dubbed the saiban-in) is designed to democratize the criminal lega...
The jury is an institution that has evoked praise and criticism throughout its history. Recently, it...
When I first began to study the jury more than thirty years ago, the topic of this Journal issue, ju...
The jury in the United States is fraught with paradoxes. Even though the number of jury trials in th...
In the late 1920s and 1930s Japan had a jury system. It was suspended in 1943 as a wartime measure,...
As juries in the U.S. and other parts of the world have increasingly come under attack, many countri...
During the past decade, state jury reform commissions, many individual federal and state judges, and...
In Japan, the idea of citizen involvement in the judicial process has gained greater acceptance over...
124 Seeing Is Believing: The Impact of Jury Service on Attitudes Toward Legal Institutions and the I...
The United States jury system is unique in the world in the frequency of its use and its symbolic si...
The Japanese seeking to involve their citizens in the judicial system as well establishing a check o...
Kiss analyzes whether the readoption of criminal jury trials in present-day Japan would be feasible ...
In many countries, lay people participate as decision makers in legal cases. Some countries include ...
The jury is integral to the American experience of democracy and yet it appears to be under attack. ...
In reviewing debates and research evidence about jury trials for our book, American Juries: The Verd...
Japan\u27s new mixed jury system (dubbed the saiban-in) is designed to democratize the criminal lega...
The jury is an institution that has evoked praise and criticism throughout its history. Recently, it...
When I first began to study the jury more than thirty years ago, the topic of this Journal issue, ju...
The jury in the United States is fraught with paradoxes. Even though the number of jury trials in th...
In the late 1920s and 1930s Japan had a jury system. It was suspended in 1943 as a wartime measure,...
As juries in the U.S. and other parts of the world have increasingly come under attack, many countri...
During the past decade, state jury reform commissions, many individual federal and state judges, and...
In Japan, the idea of citizen involvement in the judicial process has gained greater acceptance over...