This article presents a number of case studies involving pre- and mid-trial prejudice in criminal and civil litigation. The cases reveal deficiencies in the way that prejudicial publicity has been conceptualized and operationalized in many simulation experiments. The studies reveal that potential juror prejudices that concern lawyers and judges involve more than just main effects of mass media. Pre- and mid-trial prejudice also involves more general prejudices, gossip and rumor, the assertion of community normative values about justice, and conformity pressures. Four categories of prejudice recognized in American law are described and labeled: interest, specific, generic and conformity prejudice. The case studies also reveal interesting d...
Purpose. The objective of this review was to give a broad overview of various biases associated with...
grantor: University of TorontoThe present study examined the influence of general pre-tria...
The civil jury has been under attack in recent years for being unreliable and incompetent. Consideri...
This article presents a number of case studies involving pre- and mid-trial prejudice in criminal an...
Before the 1990s controlled research using mock jurors consistently found black defendants guilty mo...
The Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution grants the accused individual the right to a f...
The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of pretrial publicity (PTP) on mock juror dec...
grantor: University of TorontoThere is an apparent conflict which exists between the indi...
Published pretrial publicity (PTP) research has been conducted almost exclusively with criminal case...
The “Free Press v. Fair Trial” issue is the one in need of research, yet few students examining its ...
Six empirical studies were designed with the following three objectives: 1) To evaluate the influenc...
The authors empirically examine the challenge for cause process in the context of a murder trial in ...
In contrast to medical malpractice, legal malpractice is a phenomenon that has attracted little atte...
In ideal circumstances, court cases are won or lost on their merits. But litigation does not proceed...
The present study explored two main questions: Can jurors disregard pretrial publicity? And if juror...
Purpose. The objective of this review was to give a broad overview of various biases associated with...
grantor: University of TorontoThe present study examined the influence of general pre-tria...
The civil jury has been under attack in recent years for being unreliable and incompetent. Consideri...
This article presents a number of case studies involving pre- and mid-trial prejudice in criminal an...
Before the 1990s controlled research using mock jurors consistently found black defendants guilty mo...
The Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution grants the accused individual the right to a f...
The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of pretrial publicity (PTP) on mock juror dec...
grantor: University of TorontoThere is an apparent conflict which exists between the indi...
Published pretrial publicity (PTP) research has been conducted almost exclusively with criminal case...
The “Free Press v. Fair Trial” issue is the one in need of research, yet few students examining its ...
Six empirical studies were designed with the following three objectives: 1) To evaluate the influenc...
The authors empirically examine the challenge for cause process in the context of a murder trial in ...
In contrast to medical malpractice, legal malpractice is a phenomenon that has attracted little atte...
In ideal circumstances, court cases are won or lost on their merits. But litigation does not proceed...
The present study explored two main questions: Can jurors disregard pretrial publicity? And if juror...
Purpose. The objective of this review was to give a broad overview of various biases associated with...
grantor: University of TorontoThe present study examined the influence of general pre-tria...
The civil jury has been under attack in recent years for being unreliable and incompetent. Consideri...