Lay citizens participate as decision makers in the legal systems of many countries. This review describes the different approaches that countries employ to integrate lay decision makers, contrasting in particular the use of juries composed of all citizens with mixed decision-making bodies of lay and law-trained judges. The review discusses research on the benefits and drawbacks of lay legal decision making as well as international support for the use of ordinary citizens as legal decision makers, with an eye to explaining a recent increase in new jury systems around the world. The review calls for more comparative work on diverse approaches to lay participation, examining how different methods of including lay participation promote or detra...
The Japanese seeking to involve their citizens in the judicial system as well establishing a check o...
Lay participation in Argentinean criminal trials, even if prescribed by the 1853 Argentine Constitut...
With Japan marking its three-year anniversary of the lay judge system, now is an ideal time to asses...
Lay citizens participate as decision makers in the legal systems of many countries. This review desc...
“Juries, Lay Judges, and Trials” describes the widespread practice of including ordinary citizens as...
United States scholarship on lay participation revolves around one predominant form of lay participa...
United States scholarship on lay participation revolves around one predominant form of lay participa...
In many countries, lay people participate as decision makers in legal cases. Some countries include ...
In the late 1920s and 1930s Japan had a jury system. It was suspended in 1943 as a wartime measure,...
This introduction to the special issue of Oñati Socio-legal Series describes the goals of the confer...
On May 1, 2007, Korea\u27s National Assembly approved a judicial reform bill that introduces a jury ...
The jury is experiencing a renaissance worldwide. Countries that have never had a jury system, or ha...
The jury in the United States is fraught with paradoxes. Even though the number of jury trials in th...
Lay participation in debates concerning public policies is a touchstone of a democracy. The Constitu...
The following essay is based on a talk delivered last summer at an international conference on lay ...
The Japanese seeking to involve their citizens in the judicial system as well establishing a check o...
Lay participation in Argentinean criminal trials, even if prescribed by the 1853 Argentine Constitut...
With Japan marking its three-year anniversary of the lay judge system, now is an ideal time to asses...
Lay citizens participate as decision makers in the legal systems of many countries. This review desc...
“Juries, Lay Judges, and Trials” describes the widespread practice of including ordinary citizens as...
United States scholarship on lay participation revolves around one predominant form of lay participa...
United States scholarship on lay participation revolves around one predominant form of lay participa...
In many countries, lay people participate as decision makers in legal cases. Some countries include ...
In the late 1920s and 1930s Japan had a jury system. It was suspended in 1943 as a wartime measure,...
This introduction to the special issue of Oñati Socio-legal Series describes the goals of the confer...
On May 1, 2007, Korea\u27s National Assembly approved a judicial reform bill that introduces a jury ...
The jury is experiencing a renaissance worldwide. Countries that have never had a jury system, or ha...
The jury in the United States is fraught with paradoxes. Even though the number of jury trials in th...
Lay participation in debates concerning public policies is a touchstone of a democracy. The Constitu...
The following essay is based on a talk delivered last summer at an international conference on lay ...
The Japanese seeking to involve their citizens in the judicial system as well establishing a check o...
Lay participation in Argentinean criminal trials, even if prescribed by the 1853 Argentine Constitut...
With Japan marking its three-year anniversary of the lay judge system, now is an ideal time to asses...