英国维多利亚时代的陪审团选择

IF 0.6 Q2 LAW
Conor Hanly
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在19世纪的英国,挑选陪审团的过程是由1825年的《郡陪审团法》控制的。在正式层面上,这个过程是有序的,分为三个阶段:从县陪审员名册中准备一个陪审团,召集陪审团成员,从陪审团中选出审判陪审团。在实践中,县治安官和副治安官能够对程序施加一些影响,这种影响有时直接违反立法要求,有时甚至是腐败的。同时代的人不断抱怨这些非正式的做法,以及它们对审判陪审团的感知质量的影响。本文考察了陪审团选择过程中的三个阶段,包括立法要求和这些要求的实施,并绘制了同时代人的投诉图表。本文还试图通过参考格洛斯特郡和威尔特郡的档案材料来评估其中的一些投诉。其中一些指控是有根据的,但其他指控——尤其是所谓的从陪审员名册中除名有资格担任特别陪审员的人——似乎被夸大了。然而,治安官和副治安官的影响是明确的,无论是否合理,对陪审员质量的不满可能导致了19世纪陪审团审判使用的减少。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Jury Selection in Victorian England
The process of empanelling a jury in nineteenth-century England was controlled in most of the country by the County Juries Act 1825. At a formal level, the process was orderly and followed three stages: the preparation of a jury panel from the county jurors’ books, the summoning of the men on the jury panel, and the selection of the trial jury from the panel. In practice, the county sheriffs and undersheriffs were able to exert some influence on the process, an influence that at times ran directly contrary to legislative requirements, and sometimes was even corrupt. Contemporaries complained continually about these informal practices, and their impact upon the perceived quality of the trial juries. This article examines each of the three stages in the jury selection process, including both the legislative requirements and the implementation of those requirements, and it charts the complaints made by contemporaries. The article also attempts to assess some of these complaints by reference to archival materials from the counties of Gloucestershire and Wiltshire. Some of these complaints were well-founded, but others – especially the alleged removal from the jurors’ books of men who qualified as special jurors – appear to have been overstated. Nevertheless, the influence of the sheriffs and undersheriffs is clear, and justified or not, the dissatisfaction with the quality of jurors may have contributed to the decline in the use of jury trial over the course of the nineteenth century.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Legal History was established in 1957 as the first English-language legal history journal. The journal remains devoted to the publication of articles and documents on the history of all legal systems. The journal is refereed, and members of the Judiciary and the Bar form the advisory board.
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