Hiroshi Fukurai & Richard Krooth 
Race in the Jury Box [PDF ebook] 
Affirmative Action in Jury Selection

Soporte

Discusses race-conscious jury selection and highlights strategies for achieving racially mixed juries.

Race in the Jury Box focuses on the racially unrepresentative jury as one of the remaining barriers to racial equality and a recurring source of controversy in American life. Because members of minority groups remain underrepresented on juries, various communities have tried race-conscious jury selection, termed ‘affirmative jury selection.’ The authors argue that affirmative jury selection can insure fairness, verdict legitimization, and public confidence in the justice system. This book offers a critical analysis and systematic examination of possible applications of race-based jury selection, examining the public perception of these measures and their constitutionality. The authors make use of court cases, their own experiences as jury consultants, and jury research, as well as statistical surveys and analysis. The work concludes with the presentation of four strategies for affirmative jury selection.

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Tabla de materias

Preface
Table of Cases
1. INTRODUCTION TO RACIALLY MIXED JURIES

Racially mixed juries and jury verdicts

The significance of minority jurors in the jury box

Reform and its barriers

Conclusions

2. DEFINING AND MEASURING RACE AND RACIAL IDENTITY


Measuring and identifying race

Social deconstruction of race: Social elements and concepts

Reliability and validity of race as a measurement

Racial identity and ancestral backgrounds

Deconstructing race and the importance of affirmative action programs

Conclusions

3. RACIALLY MIXED JURIES AND AFFIRMATIVE ACTION


Affirmative action in jury selection

The jury ‘de medietate linguae’ model

The Hennepin County model

The social science model

Public perceptions of racially balanced juries

Results

Racially diverse juries, racial quotas, and peremptory challenges

Conclusions

4. EUGENE ‘BEAR’ LINCOLN AND THE NATIVE AMERICAN JURY: AFFIRMATIVE ACTION IN JURY SELECTION AND PEREMPTORY INCLUSION


People v. Eugene ‘
Bear’
Lincoln

Defense strategies to increase the likelihood of a racially diverse jury

Affirmative jury structures and peremptory inclusion

The need for progressive legislative and court action

Conclusions

5. THE SIXTH AMENDMENT AND THE RACIALLY MIXED JURY


Impartiality

The fair cross-section requirement

Jury of one’s peers

Conclusions

6. SHORTCOMINGS OF PROCEDURALLY BASED REMEDIES: JURY REPRESENTATION FROM THE BEGINNING TO THE END OF THE JURY SELECTION PROCESS


The goal of random selection and the fair cross-section doctrine

Empirical checkpoints in jury selection

Jury representation from the beginning to the end of jury selection

Analyses and findings

Partial remedies and their impacts on jury selection

Final jury composition: Inequities, remedies, and future reforms

Conclusions

7. JURY NULLIFICATION AND THE MINORITY-DOMINANT CRIMINAL JURY: THE O. J. SIMPSON VERDICT AND ACQUITTAL BY RACE


Presumption of innocence, the burden of proof, and reasonable doubt

The Simpson jury and a hypothetical scenario

A hypothetical scenario: Results and findings

Jury nullification, racial identity, and legal concepts

Conclusions

8. JURY NULLIFICATION AND AFFIRMATIVE ACTION JURIES


Jury nullification

Jury nullification and affirmative action juries

Jury nullification and criminal justice concepts

Judicial and legislative history of jury nullification

Conclusions

9. RACE AND THE AFFIRMATIVE JURY: CONCLUSIONS


The jury and the potential for democracy

Distinguishing features of affirmative action in jury selection

Conclusions

Appendix A: SURVEY AND DATA BASE INFORMATION


Community surveys (4 data sets)

College student survey (1 data set)

Jury panel survey (1 data set)

College student experiment (1 data set)

Census Information

Appendix B: METHODOLOGICAL STRATEGIES ON HOW TO DETERMINE AND MEASURE RACE IN COURTROOMS
Notes
Bibliography

Index

Sobre el autor

Hiroshi Fukurai is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of California at Santa Cruz. Richard Krooth is Visiting Scholar of Sociology at the University of California at Berkeley and teaches International Studies at Golden Gate University. They are the coauthors of Common Destiny: Japan and the United States in the Global Age and (with Edgar W. Butler) of Race and the Jury: Racial Disenfranchisement and the Search for Justice.

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Idioma Inglés ● Formato PDF ● Páginas 290 ● ISBN 9780791486252 ● Tamaño de archivo 2.3 MB ● Editorial State University of New York Press ● Ciudad Albany ● País US ● Publicado 2012 ● Descargable 24 meses ● Divisa EUR ● ID 7665118 ● Protección de copia Adobe DRM
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