Vol. 55 No. 3, March - March 2014
Index
- Introduction: the civil jury as a political institution.
- Opening remarks.
- Second-order diversity revisited.
- Second-order diversity revisited.
- The jury as a political institution: an internal perspective.
- Diversity and the civil jury.
- Embedded experts on real juries: a delicate balance.
- What's it worth? Jury damage awards as community judgments.
- An exploration of "noneconomic" damages in civil jury awards.
- An exploration of "noneconomic" damages in civil jury awards.
- The jury and participatory democracy.
- Juries as regulators of last resort.
- Fiduciary principles and the jury.
- Political decision making by informed juries.
- Jury ignorance and political ignorance.
- Blackstone's curse: the fall of the criminal, civil, and grand juries and the rise of the executive, the legislature, the judiciary, and the states.
- Restoring the civil jury's role in the structure of our government.