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Who Judges?
Designing Jury Systems in Japan, East Asia, and Europe

Who Judges? is the first book to explain why different states design their new jury systems in markedly different ways.

Rieko Kage (Author)

9781108707091, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 21 February 2019

278 pages, 25 b/w illus. 19 tables
23 x 15 x 1.5 cm, 0.4 kg

'Kage's book will become a touchstone for studies of Japanese legal reform as well as for broader accounts of the politics of lay participation.' Tom Ginsburg, Social Science Japan Journal

The delivery of justice is a core function of the modern state. The recent introduction of jury/lay judge systems for criminal trials in Japan, South Korea, Spain, and perhaps soon Taiwan represents a potentially major reform of this core function, shifting decision making authority from professional judges to ordinary citizens. But the four countries chose to empower their citizens to markedly different degrees. Why? Who Judges? is the first book to offer a systematic account for why different countries design their new jury/lay judge systems in very different ways. Drawing on detailed theoretical analysis, original case studies, and content analysis of fifty years of Japanese parliamentary debates, the book reveals that the relative power of 'new left'-oriented political parties explains the different magnitudes of reform in the four countries. Rieko Kage's vital new study opens up an exciting new area of research for comparative politics and socio-legal studies.

1. Introduction
2. Theoretical framework: participation and partisan politics
3. The distribution of cases
4. The history of the lay judge system debate in Japan up to 1996
5. Bringing the lay judge system back in, 1997–2004
6. Setting the agenda: new left-oriented parties and deliberations in the Japanese parliament
7. Proposals for lay participation in the Republic of China
8. Introducing jury systems in South Korea and Spain
9. The impact of new lay judge systems
10. Conclusions.

Subject Areas: Judicial review [LNDM], Jurisprudence & general issues [LA], Regional government policies [JPRB], Political parties [JPL], Political structures: democracy [JPHV], Socialism & left-of-centre democratic ideologies [JPFF], Comparative politics [JPB]

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