This article reports on a field experiment on the effect of media information on people’s attitudes towards the justice system. For the duration of a year a dutch local newspaper took small groups of readers, called ‘newspaper jurors’, to court sessions of criminal cases and subsequently reported on their experiences and perceptions. Using a quasi-experimental design, we examined whether an attitude change in the general reader population of this particular local newspaper occurred as a result of the jury’s newspaper reports. Findings show that, after the treatment interval of 1 year, no attitude change in the general reader population could be identified that was absent in the control group
Pretrial publicity (PTP), defined as any news story about a case not yet in trial, has been shown to...
This article examines the gap between dutch judges and the public in terms of preferred severity of ...
This article examines the gap between Dutch judges and the public in terms of preferred severity of ...
This article reports on a field experiment on the effect of media information on people’s attitudes ...
This article reports on a field experiment on the effect of media information on people's attitudes ...
Study among readers of local Dutch newspapers on the effects of readers jury's on perceptions and at...
Objectives: Providing detailed information about sentencing reduces punitive attitudes of laymen (th...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [79]-84)This study examined the impact of different media...
This thesis explores the relationship between crime, media, and public opinion of crime and criminal...
International audienceThe present study examines how potential jury members' judgments are affected ...
The present study examines how potential jury members' judgments are affected by two types of inform...
There is substantial evidence that media sources have identifiable political slants, but there has b...
This thesis explores the relationship between crime, media, and public opinion of crime and criminal...
Public thinking on controversial issues is important to measure, given its impact on citizens‟ attit...
Media attention and public sentiment on crime and the criminal justice system, both have been widely...
Pretrial publicity (PTP), defined as any news story about a case not yet in trial, has been shown to...
This article examines the gap between dutch judges and the public in terms of preferred severity of ...
This article examines the gap between Dutch judges and the public in terms of preferred severity of ...
This article reports on a field experiment on the effect of media information on people’s attitudes ...
This article reports on a field experiment on the effect of media information on people's attitudes ...
Study among readers of local Dutch newspapers on the effects of readers jury's on perceptions and at...
Objectives: Providing detailed information about sentencing reduces punitive attitudes of laymen (th...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [79]-84)This study examined the impact of different media...
This thesis explores the relationship between crime, media, and public opinion of crime and criminal...
International audienceThe present study examines how potential jury members' judgments are affected ...
The present study examines how potential jury members' judgments are affected by two types of inform...
There is substantial evidence that media sources have identifiable political slants, but there has b...
This thesis explores the relationship between crime, media, and public opinion of crime and criminal...
Public thinking on controversial issues is important to measure, given its impact on citizens‟ attit...
Media attention and public sentiment on crime and the criminal justice system, both have been widely...
Pretrial publicity (PTP), defined as any news story about a case not yet in trial, has been shown to...
This article examines the gap between dutch judges and the public in terms of preferred severity of ...
This article examines the gap between Dutch judges and the public in terms of preferred severity of ...