Description

In this study, Franklin Strier proposes reforms for the American trial system. Arguing that lawyers need to share more power with the judge and jury, he recommends ways we can retain and improve our basic adversarial system. The work suggests we eliminate peremptory challenges, give judges the authority to ask questions of witnesses, and limit the number of expert witnesses. Drawing from a wide variety of sources, including case histories, scholarly works, Blackstone's "Commentaries", and "The Federalist Papers", he argues that judicial reform is not only possible, but - because of the increased public coverage of trials and understanding of the need for reform - inevitable. Franklin Strier brings this critical look at trial reform up to date with a new preface in which he discusses how the inordinate amount of public attention of the O.J. Simpson trial, and the power the attorneys had over the court in that case, shed new light on the trial system's weaknesses and inequities.

Reconstructing Justice: An Agenda for Trial Reform

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In this study, Franklin Strier proposes reforms for the American trial system. Arguing that lawyers need to share more power... Read more

    Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
    Publication Date: 15/05/1996
    ISBN13: 9780226777184, 978-0226777184
    ISBN10: 0226777189

    Number of Pages: 328

    Non Fiction , Law , Education

    Description

    In this study, Franklin Strier proposes reforms for the American trial system. Arguing that lawyers need to share more power with the judge and jury, he recommends ways we can retain and improve our basic adversarial system. The work suggests we eliminate peremptory challenges, give judges the authority to ask questions of witnesses, and limit the number of expert witnesses. Drawing from a wide variety of sources, including case histories, scholarly works, Blackstone's "Commentaries", and "The Federalist Papers", he argues that judicial reform is not only possible, but - because of the increased public coverage of trials and understanding of the need for reform - inevitable. Franklin Strier brings this critical look at trial reform up to date with a new preface in which he discusses how the inordinate amount of public attention of the O.J. Simpson trial, and the power the attorneys had over the court in that case, shed new light on the trial system's weaknesses and inequities.

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