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US and France: similar histories regarding composition of juries. Initially,US: white male landownersFrance: bankers,highly placed functionaries, status and moneyEventually,Right to serve on juries became democratized in both countries. Discrimination remained. IN both the US and in France,under-representation of the very poor and the very rich, females (esp in France), the very young and the very old..
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1. Juries: US and France
Charlan Jeanne Nemeth
Univ California, Berkeley USA
Presentation to Jury Research Conference, Sydney University Law School, Sydney, NSW Oct 17, 2003
3. Discrimination remained IN both the US and in France,
under-representation of the very poor and the very rich, females (esp in France), the very young and the very old.
4. Juries in the United States 12 people (normally); all laymen
deliberate to unanimity (normally)
deliberation is secret
no one is present except jurors (ordinary citizens) for deliberation
5. Juries in France 12 people on jury consisting of 3 judges and 9 laymen
Only 8 out of 12 votes are needed for conviction
6. Power/Status: Judges inside the jury France: 3 judges deliberate with 9 lay jurors on both conviction and punishment
Red robes, at elevated table surrounded by beautiful art and long traditions
Status induces compliance
7. The issue of unanimity 12 unanimous vs 8:4
It almost changed in the US: Apodaca etal v Oregon; Johnson v Louisiana (l970)
8. First Ballot and Final Verdict
9. Apodaca,Cooper and Madden v.Oregon Johnson vs. Louisiana -- Court Opinion (Nemeth,1981;2001)
10. Apodaca,Cooper and Madden v Oregon Johnson v Louisiana -- Dissenting Opinion
11. The experimental evidence Most studies show no significant differences in verdict as a function of unanimity vs some sort of majority rule
Groups hang more often under require-ments of unanimity
A 2/3 majority wins
12. Questions If unanimity NOT required,
would minority views be given due consideration?
Would there be premature consideration --stop after requisite majority is reached
would community confidence be undermined?
13. An experiment and Trial Court (Nemeth,1976;1981,2001) First degree murder case in experimental setting:2/3 majority vs unanimity required
Trial court practice: arson, contract default, murder,etc.
14. The answers Stopping short of unanimity (as soon as the requisite majority is reached)? Maj rule: Stop short of unanimity but do not stop at requisite majority
4:2 5:1 6:0
4 9 5
15. The answers Due consideration to minority views Functional deliberation time
Maj rule Unanimity
12.45 17.66
16. The answers Community confidence Agreement with verdict
Maj Unan
3.77 4.45
Justice administered
Maj Unan
3.49 3.78
17. The answers: The nature of the deliberation More conflict under unanimity
comments giving information; giving opinions
18. Bales Categories Nemeth,1976
19. The nature of the deliberation
Functional deliberation time greater under requirement of unanimity.
Minority views are expressed --equivalent comments to majority for longer time.
20. The difficult question: how is justice best served, truth best detected? Protection of minority views may be important, not because they hold a truth but because their views stimulate divergent information processing and thought.
21. MINORITIES stimulate:
search for more infor- mation on all sides
utilization of all strategies
detection of novel,correct solutions
more creativity;better group decision making MAJORITIES stimulate
search for information supporting majority
utilization of majority strategy
following of majority; no novel detection
reduced creativity; premature consensus
22. Process for detection of truth? Smarter people? The role of education, training, expertise
Stimulating divergent thought? Protecting minority views by less status differences and a requirement for unanimity??
23. Questions of Democracy and Due Process Do we really trust the layman?
OR Do we prefer the educated, the expert
Do we want majorities to rule?
OR Do we require unanimity, protect minority views and take the chance of hung juries
24. Selected References Bermant, G., Nemeth,C & Vidmar,N (eds (1976) Psychology and the Law: Research Frontiers. Lexington,MA: D.C.Heath &Co.
Nemeth,C (1977) Interactions between jurors as a function of majority vs unanimity decision rules. Journal of Applied Social Psychology 7, 38-56.
Nemeth,C. (1981) Jury trials: Psychology and the Law. In L. Berkowitz (ed) Advances in Experimental Social Psychology(vol 14,pp309-367). New York: Academic Press
Nemeth, C (1984) Processus de groupe et jurys: Les Etats-Unis et la France. In S. Moscovici (ed) Psychologie Sociale (pp229-251). Paris: Presses Universitaires de France.
Nemeth, C (1995 Dissent as driving cognition, attitudes and judgments.Social Cognition, 13, 273-291.
Nemeth,C.J. (2001) Dissent, diversity and juries. In F.Butera and G. Mugny (eds) Social Influence n Social Reality (pp23-32). Bern: Hogrefe & Huber.