Commonsense Justice: Jurors’ Notions of the Law

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Harvard University Press, 2001 M04 16 - 400 páginas

For the first time in our history, U.S. prisons house over a million inmates, enough to populate a city larger than San Francisco. Building prisons is the new growth industry, as the American public reacts to a perceived increase in violence and politicians take a hard line toward crime. But this eagerness to construct more prisons raises basic questions about what the community wants and will tolerate and what the Supreme Court will sanction.

In this timely book, Norman Finkel looks at the relationship between the “law on the books,” as set down in the Constitution and developed in cases and decisions, and what he calls “commonsense justice,” the ordinary citizen’s notions of what is just and fair. Law is an essentially human endeavor, a collection of psychological theories about why people think, feel, and behave as they do, and when and why we should find some of them blameworthy and punishable. But is it independent of community sentiment, as some would contend? Or, as Finkel suggests, do juries bring the community’s judgment to bear on the moral blameworthiness of the defendant? When jurors decide that the law is unfair, or the punishment inappropriate for a particular defendant, they have sometimes nullified the law.

Nullification represents the jury’s desire not to defeat but “to perfect and complete” the law. It is the “no confidence” vote of commonsense justice refusing to follow the path the law has marked out—and pointing to a new path based on what seem to be more just grounds. Finkel brings to life the story behind the jury and judicial decisions, interweaving anecdotes, case law, and social science research to present a balanced and comprehensive view of important legal and social policy issues.

 

Contenido

In Search of Community Sentiment
7
Understanding Nullification
23
Revealing Jurors Sentiments
41
How Jurors Construct Reality
63
Objectivity versus Subjectivity in the Law
79
The Sacred Precinct of the Bedroom
97
The Right to Die
112
Cruel and Unusual Punishment
132
The Juvenile Death Penalty
196
On SelfDefense Justice
223
The SelfDefense Drama
240
The Maddening Changes in Insanity Law
261
How Jurors Construe Insanity
279
Murderous Passions Mitigating Sentiments
298
The Path of Commonsense Justice
319
Notes
339

Murther Most Foul
154
Death Is Different
172

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Página 3 - The life of the law has not been logic: it has been experience. The felt necessities of the time, the prevalent moral and political theories, intuitions of public policy, avowed or unconscious, even the prejudices which judges share with their fellow-men, have had a good deal more to do than the syllogism in determining the rules by which men should be governed.

Acerca del autor (2001)

Norman J. Finkel is Professor of Psychology, Georgetown University.

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