Description |
174 pages ; 21 cm |
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regular print |
Series |
Contemporary issues |
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Contemporary issues (Nedlands, W.A.)
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Contents |
Preface / Chris Cuneen -- Introduction / Kate Auty and Sandy Toussaint. Pt. I. Being "in" and "of" the jury: 1. Three jurors' tales / Anon -- 2. Waiting for the jury / Liz Gaynor. Pt. II. Jury competence and the questionable need for change: 3. Jury comptetence, decision-making and nullification / Ivan Vodanovich. Pt. III. Outsiders in the jury system: 4. "Mr Neal is entitled to be an agitator": Indigenous people put upon their country / Richard Frankland -- 5. Putting Aboriginal defendants off their country / Kate Auty. Pt. IV: Women as outsiders in the jury system: 6. One Indigenous woman and what "her" jury did not hear / Sarah Ford and Kate Auty -- 7. Self-defence and women's lives: reality and unreality in criminal justice / Jocelynne A. Scutt -- Afterword / Kate Auty |
Summary |
How well does our jury system work, and does trial by jury guarantee justice to those brought before it? A Jury of Whose Peers examines the workings of the jury system in Australia, exploring it from a range of perspectives, including the experiences of jurors, lawyers, barristers, an anthropologist and an indigenous writer |
Analysis |
Juries |
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Decision making |
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Attitudes |
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Cultural values |
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Justice |
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Case studies |
Notes |
Includes index |
Bibliography |
Bibliography: pages 152-172 |
Subject |
Trial practice -- Australia.
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Justice, Administration of -- Australia.
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Jury -- Australia.
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Author |
Toussaint, Sandy.
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Auty, Kate.
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LC no. |
00002528 |
ISBN |
192069417X : |
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