© The Author(s) 2017. Indigenous peoples in Australia, the United States and Canada are significantly overrepresented as defendants in criminal trials and yet vastly underrepresented on juries in criminal trials. This means that all-white juries mostly determine the guilt of Indigenous defendants or white defendants responsible for harming Indigenous victims. In this article, we explore cases in which Indigenous defendants have perceived that an all-white jury's prejudice against Indigenous people would prevent them receiving a fair trial. It focuses on Indigenous defendants (often facing charges in relation to protesting against white racism) challenging the array of all-white juries. Across these cases, Australian courts rely on formal no...
Recent Australia research on Indigenous sentencing primarily explores whether disparities in sentenc...
Given the current social and political climate of emphasis on sexual violence awareness, as well as ...
How should trial experts approach cases of racial profiling? As a British philosopher, albeit one w...
An analytic essay on racism against Indigenous peoples in Canadian juries.AgoraCopyright held by aut...
Indigenous Peoples are overrepresented in all aspects of the Canadian criminal justice system. Most ...
Indigenous people face procedural barriers in bringing actions in the Australian legal system, such ...
This Article highlights how Batson challenges may be instructive for addressing racial biases in jur...
In both Canada and the United States, the constitutional right to a jury trial includes the right to...
Under common law, Canadian jury panels, or arrays, are supposed to be broadly representative. In the...
This dissertation is a scholarly reflection of my journey as an Aboriginal man who fought unsuccessf...
In 2016, Colten Boushie, a 22-year-old Indigenous man, was fatally shot by Gerald Stanley, a white f...
In their statistical analyses of higher court sentencing in South Australia, Jeffries and Bond (2009...
Under common law, Canadian jury panels, or arrays, are supposed to be broadly representative. In the...
Since 1999, a number of Indigenous sentencing courts have been established in Australia that use Ind...
In their statistical analyses of higher court sentencing in South Australia, Jeffries and Bond (2009...
Recent Australia research on Indigenous sentencing primarily explores whether disparities in sentenc...
Given the current social and political climate of emphasis on sexual violence awareness, as well as ...
How should trial experts approach cases of racial profiling? As a British philosopher, albeit one w...
An analytic essay on racism against Indigenous peoples in Canadian juries.AgoraCopyright held by aut...
Indigenous Peoples are overrepresented in all aspects of the Canadian criminal justice system. Most ...
Indigenous people face procedural barriers in bringing actions in the Australian legal system, such ...
This Article highlights how Batson challenges may be instructive for addressing racial biases in jur...
In both Canada and the United States, the constitutional right to a jury trial includes the right to...
Under common law, Canadian jury panels, or arrays, are supposed to be broadly representative. In the...
This dissertation is a scholarly reflection of my journey as an Aboriginal man who fought unsuccessf...
In 2016, Colten Boushie, a 22-year-old Indigenous man, was fatally shot by Gerald Stanley, a white f...
In their statistical analyses of higher court sentencing in South Australia, Jeffries and Bond (2009...
Under common law, Canadian jury panels, or arrays, are supposed to be broadly representative. In the...
Since 1999, a number of Indigenous sentencing courts have been established in Australia that use Ind...
In their statistical analyses of higher court sentencing in South Australia, Jeffries and Bond (2009...
Recent Australia research on Indigenous sentencing primarily explores whether disparities in sentenc...
Given the current social and political climate of emphasis on sexual violence awareness, as well as ...
How should trial experts approach cases of racial profiling? As a British philosopher, albeit one w...