In this article, the way that the jury works is considered from a group-analytic perspective. Observational fieldwork of simulated jury deliberations is presented. The data was gathered from a joint funded Home Office and Law Commission project at the Socio- Legal Studies Centre, Oxford in 1995. Inferences are drawn from the observations and the unconscious group processes are considered. The efficacy of the jury process is discussed
Jury deliberations provide a quintessential example of collective decision-making, but few studies h...
720 college students served on 6- or 12-member "juries" that listened to a simulated trial of a rape...
Widespread use of simulated trials and mock juries to study jury behavior has stimulated concern for...
In this article, the way that the jury works is considered from a group-analytic perspective. Obser...
Considerable evidence has been gathered from studies of "jury-like" decision-making suggesting that ...
Much of the extant research on jury decision making has been conducted at the juror level, examining...
Much of the extant research on jury decision making has been conducted at the juror level, examining...
Whilst jury trials are widely considered to be a fairer way of deciding whether an accused person is...
What form should jury decision-making take? In particular, should juries be permitted—even encourage...
This study investigated the impact of jailhouse informant testimony on mock juries. In addition to a...
Juries are distinct groups in which scholars have been investigating for decades past. Members of th...
Juries are tasked with the duty of deliberating and applying the law to the case at hand. But it is ...
This study examined the following question: How well will a predictor of an individual juror's decis...
In the past, there have been three major approaches to the experimental investigation of the jury. F...
This article employs the techniques of the social sciences in testing a legal proposition. After set...
Jury deliberations provide a quintessential example of collective decision-making, but few studies h...
720 college students served on 6- or 12-member "juries" that listened to a simulated trial of a rape...
Widespread use of simulated trials and mock juries to study jury behavior has stimulated concern for...
In this article, the way that the jury works is considered from a group-analytic perspective. Obser...
Considerable evidence has been gathered from studies of "jury-like" decision-making suggesting that ...
Much of the extant research on jury decision making has been conducted at the juror level, examining...
Much of the extant research on jury decision making has been conducted at the juror level, examining...
Whilst jury trials are widely considered to be a fairer way of deciding whether an accused person is...
What form should jury decision-making take? In particular, should juries be permitted—even encourage...
This study investigated the impact of jailhouse informant testimony on mock juries. In addition to a...
Juries are distinct groups in which scholars have been investigating for decades past. Members of th...
Juries are tasked with the duty of deliberating and applying the law to the case at hand. But it is ...
This study examined the following question: How well will a predictor of an individual juror's decis...
In the past, there have been three major approaches to the experimental investigation of the jury. F...
This article employs the techniques of the social sciences in testing a legal proposition. After set...
Jury deliberations provide a quintessential example of collective decision-making, but few studies h...
720 college students served on 6- or 12-member "juries" that listened to a simulated trial of a rape...
Widespread use of simulated trials and mock juries to study jury behavior has stimulated concern for...