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Right to a Fair Trial [Hardback]

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The right to a fair trial is often held as a central constitutional protection. It nevertheless remains unclear what precisely should count as a 'fair' trial and who should decide verdicts. This already difficult issue has become even more important given a number of proposed reforms of the trial, especially for defendants charged with terrorism offences. This collection, The Right to a Fair Trial, is the first to publish in one place the most influential work in the field on the following topics: including the right to jury trial; lay participation in trials; jury nullification; trial reform; the civil jury trial; and the more recent issue of terrorism trials. The collection should help inform both scholars and students of both the importance and complexity of the right to a fair trial, as well as shed light on how the trial might be further improved.
Acknowledgements vii
Series Preface ix
Introduction xi
PART I THE RIGHT TO TRIAL BY JURY
`The Sacred Cow of Trial by Jury', Irish Jurist, 25, pp. 57-68
3(12)
R.J. O'Hanlon
`The Courage of Our Convictions', Michigan Law Review, 97, pp. 2381-47
15(68)
Sherman J. Clark
`The Right to Trial by Jury', Journal of Applied Philosophy, 21, pp. 197-212
83(18)
Thom Brooks
PART II LAY PARTICIPATION
`Lay Participation in Decision Making: A Croatian Perspective on Mixed Tribunals', Howard Journal of Criminal Justice, 36, pp. 406-23
101(18)
Sanja Kutnjak Ivkovic
`Democratic Accountability and Lay Participation in Criminal Trials', in A. Duff, L. Farmer, S. Marshall and V. Tadros (eds), The Trial on Trial, vol. II: Judgment and Calling to Account, Oxford: Hart, pp. 135-53
119(22)
Tatjana Hornle
PART III JURY NULLIFICATION
`The Myth of the Nullifying Jury', Northwestern University Law Review, 93, pp. 877-959
141(84)
Nancy S. Marder
`A Defence of Jury Nullification', Res Publica, 10, pp. 401-23
225(26)
Thom Brooks
PART IV TRIAL REFORM
`The Lamp That Shows That Freedom Lives --- Is It Worth the Candle?', Criminal Law Review, pp. 740-52
251(14)
Penny Darbyshire
`The Case for Jury Waiver', Criminal Law Review, pp. 155-72
265(18)
Sean Doran
John Jackson
`Modes of Trial: Shifting the Balance Towards the Professional Judge', Criminal Law Review, pp. 249-71
283(26)
John Jackson
PART V THE CIVIL TRIAL
`Why Judges, Not Juries, Should Set Punitive Damages', University of Chicago Law Review, 65, pp. 179-224
309(46)
Paul Mogin
`Decisionmaking about General Damages: A Comparison of Jurors, Judges, and Lawyers', Michigan Law Review, 98, pp. 751-826
355(78)
Roselle L. Wissler
Allen J. Hart
Michael J. Saks
PART VI TRIALS AND TERRORISM
`Terrorism on Trial: The President's Constitutional Authority to Order the Prosecution of Suspected Terrorists by Military Commission', Duke Law Journal, 51, pp. 1831-56
433(26)
Christopher M. Evans
`Judicial Review of Counter-Terrorism Measures: The Israeli Model for the Role of the Judiciary during the Terror Era', New York University of International Law and Politics, 38, pp. 67-120
459(54)
Yigal Mersel
Name Index 513
Dr Thom Brooks is Reader in Political and Legal Philosophy at the University of Newcastle, UK. He is editor of the Journal of Moral Philosophy and editor of Rousseau and Law (Ashgate, 2005), The Legacy of John Rawls (2005, 2d ed 2007), Locke and Law (Ashgate, 2007), and The Global Justice Reader (2007), as well as author of Hegel's Political Philosophy (2007) and Punishment (2009).