In both Canada and the United States, the constitutional right to a jury trial includes the right to select a jury from a representative cross-section of the jury-eligible population. This article compares and contrasts how this right has been interpreted in the two countries through the lens of recent controversies. In Part I, the article examines how the Supreme Court of Canada and the United States Supreme Court have defined the representative cross-section component of the right to a jury trial in the two respective countries. In Part II, the article focuses on the crisis of Aboriginal underrepresentation on coroner and petit juries in Ontario, Canada. The findings of the Iaocubucci Report exploring the breadth of the problem, the reaso...
Under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, federal jury pools must reflect a fair ...
In the United States, voir dire is viewed as essential to selecting an impartial jury. Judges, lawye...
This Article exposes a surprising doctrinal distortion that has unfolded since the Supreme Court fir...
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...
Indigenous Peoples are overrepresented in all aspects of the Canadian criminal justice system. Most ...
© The Author(s) 2017. Indigenous peoples in Australia, the United States and Canada are significantl...
Under common law, Canadian jury panels, or arrays, are supposed to be broadly representative. In the...
The Canadian criminal jury system has some unique characteristics. In contrast to American law, that...
In 2016, Colten Boushie, a 22-year-old Indigenous man, was fatally shot by Gerald Stanley, a white f...
An analytic essay on racism against Indigenous peoples in Canadian juries.AgoraCopyright held by aut...
Vidmar discusses the history of the Canadian jury and develops a profile of the Canadian jury today....
This article commences with a discussion of recent research on perceptions of treatment of ethnic mi...
This Article highlights how Batson challenges may be instructive for addressing racial biases in jur...
In this paper the author discusses the Supreme Court of Canada’s decisions in the jury vetting cases...
Under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, federal jury pools must reflect a fair ...
In the United States, voir dire is viewed as essential to selecting an impartial jury. Judges, lawye...
This Article exposes a surprising doctrinal distortion that has unfolded since the Supreme Court fir...
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...
Indigenous Peoples are overrepresented in all aspects of the Canadian criminal justice system. Most ...
© The Author(s) 2017. Indigenous peoples in Australia, the United States and Canada are significantl...
Under common law, Canadian jury panels, or arrays, are supposed to be broadly representative. In the...
The Canadian criminal jury system has some unique characteristics. In contrast to American law, that...
In 2016, Colten Boushie, a 22-year-old Indigenous man, was fatally shot by Gerald Stanley, a white f...
An analytic essay on racism against Indigenous peoples in Canadian juries.AgoraCopyright held by aut...
Vidmar discusses the history of the Canadian jury and develops a profile of the Canadian jury today....
This article commences with a discussion of recent research on perceptions of treatment of ethnic mi...
This Article highlights how Batson challenges may be instructive for addressing racial biases in jur...
In this paper the author discusses the Supreme Court of Canada’s decisions in the jury vetting cases...
Under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, federal jury pools must reflect a fair ...
In the United States, voir dire is viewed as essential to selecting an impartial jury. Judges, lawye...
This Article exposes a surprising doctrinal distortion that has unfolded since the Supreme Court fir...