The 1991 Civil Rights Act revolutionized employment discrimination litigation by allowing for compensatory and punitive damages. At the same time, however, the Act capped those damages and forbade courts from informing jurors about the cap. This Article explores the effects of this imposed secrecy on the jury deliberation process and on the jury system itself. First, our article delves into the wealth of psychological literature about jury decision-making to determine how disclosing or hiding the caps might affect the jury\u27s damage calculations. We explore decision-making biases and heuristics that might systematically affect the jurors\u27 judgment about damage awards, and discuss how those awards might be changed if jurors were informe...
Scholarly and public attention to the burden of proof and jury instructions has increased dramatical...
Historically, the American legal system has accorded juries wide discretion to impose sentences in t...
Pity the civil jury, seen by some as the sickest organ of a sick system. Yet the jury has always bee...
The 1991 Civil Rights Act revolutionized employment discrimination litigation by allowing for compen...
In many states, legislatures have mandated juryless fact-finding in common law– based civil cases by...
In Part I, I review the empirical evidence concerning the effect of jury discrimination on jury deci...
As the Court has expanded its definition of jury selection techniques that violate constitutional st...
Fueled by anecdotal instances of extremely large damage awards, there has been significant public co...
In their recent Arizona Law Review article entitled What Juries Can\u27t Do Well: The Jury\u27s Perf...
In response to concerns that jury awards in tort cases are excessive and unpredictable, nearly every...
Jury instructions on damage awards are notoriously vague and ambiguous. As a result, awards are some...
The civil jury, though constitutionally protected by the seventh amendment, has remained a controver...
This article describes the myriad ways in which misconduct by jurors can contaminate a trial and ver...
Juries have deliberated in secret since medieval times. Thehistorical reason for the secrecy is that...
The role of the jury in awarding monetary damages to plaintiffs in a wide range of civil cases has c...
Scholarly and public attention to the burden of proof and jury instructions has increased dramatical...
Historically, the American legal system has accorded juries wide discretion to impose sentences in t...
Pity the civil jury, seen by some as the sickest organ of a sick system. Yet the jury has always bee...
The 1991 Civil Rights Act revolutionized employment discrimination litigation by allowing for compen...
In many states, legislatures have mandated juryless fact-finding in common law– based civil cases by...
In Part I, I review the empirical evidence concerning the effect of jury discrimination on jury deci...
As the Court has expanded its definition of jury selection techniques that violate constitutional st...
Fueled by anecdotal instances of extremely large damage awards, there has been significant public co...
In their recent Arizona Law Review article entitled What Juries Can\u27t Do Well: The Jury\u27s Perf...
In response to concerns that jury awards in tort cases are excessive and unpredictable, nearly every...
Jury instructions on damage awards are notoriously vague and ambiguous. As a result, awards are some...
The civil jury, though constitutionally protected by the seventh amendment, has remained a controver...
This article describes the myriad ways in which misconduct by jurors can contaminate a trial and ver...
Juries have deliberated in secret since medieval times. Thehistorical reason for the secrecy is that...
The role of the jury in awarding monetary damages to plaintiffs in a wide range of civil cases has c...
Scholarly and public attention to the burden of proof and jury instructions has increased dramatical...
Historically, the American legal system has accorded juries wide discretion to impose sentences in t...
Pity the civil jury, seen by some as the sickest organ of a sick system. Yet the jury has always bee...