Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead
The Power of the Jury
Transforming Citizens into Jurors
Demonstrates how each stage of the jury process transforms citizens into responsible jurors.
Nancy S. Marder (Author)
9781108704793, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 15 September 2022
225 pages
22.8 x 15.1 x 1.6 cm, 0.44 kg
'Professor Nancy S. Marder has written a meticulously researched, comprehensive, and powerful account of how the jury trial process transforms ordinary people into responsible jurors. This compelling book of citizen transformation forces us to rethink our traditional ideas about the jury trial process. A tour de force!' Valerie P. Hans, Charles F. Rechlin Professor of Law, Cornell Law School
Offering an alternative view of the jury process, this book argues that each stage transforms ordinary citizens, who are oftentimes reluctant to serve on juries, into responsible jurors. Jurors, Professor Marder argues, are not found, but rather they are made and shaped by the jury process. This book analyzes each stage of this process, from initial summons to post-verdict interview, and shows how these stages equip jurors with experiences and knowledge that allow them to perform their new role ably. It adopts a holistic approach to the subject of jury reform and suggests reforms that will aid the transformation of citizens into jurors. By studying the jury from the perspective of jurors, it gives readers a better understanding of what takes place during jury trials and allows them to see juries, jurors, and the jury process in a new light.
Introduction
1. The summons and the setting: Beginning the transformation of citizens into jurors
2. Voir Dire: Introducing jurors to the judge, their fellow jurors, and their role
3. Peremptory challenges: A barrier that unnecessarily limits who can serve as jurors
4. Jury instructions: Reinforcing group identity and making instructions accessible to jurors
5. Jury deliberations: Performing the jury's main task with occasional assistance from the judge
6. The post-verdict interview: How judges can help jurors in their transformation from jurors to engaged citizens
Conclusion.
Subject Areas: Jurisprudence & general issues [LA], History of the Americas [HBJK]