Article contents
Assessment of the Jury Systems in Asia: A Comparison of Korea and Japan
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 July 2019
Abstract
This article compares the Korean and Japanese jury systems, evaluating the performance of jury trials as reflected in empirical studies in these countries, and identifying some innovative practices in Korean and Japanese systems that can be adopted by other jurisdictions. This comparative study of Korean and Japanese jury systems will also address common problems and investigate different approaches to those problems. At this juncture, numerous existing empirical studies conducted in both countries provide a good framework for comparison. Although jury trials are firmly entrenched within the Korean and Japanese legal systems, there are several common challenges faced by each country that uses lay juries: avoidance of bias, judicial oversight and intervention for reasoned decision-making, importance of rationality in the jury deliberation process, etc. A careful analysis of the Korean and Japanese experiences will provide useful guidance to not only policymakers in Asia but also criminal justice scholars around the world.
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- Copyright © National University of Singapore, 2019
Footnotes
Professor, School of Law, Seoul National University. First author.
Professor, Graduate School of Public Administration, Seoul National University. Corresponding author.
This article was supported by the Asia-Pacific Law Institute of Seoul National University in 2019. Our thanks to the Centre for Asian Legal Studies (CALS) and the Asian Law Institute (ASLI) at the National University of Singapore (NUS) for supporting my participation at the conferences entitled ‘The State of Comparative Law in Asia’ and ‘Teaching Comparative Law in Asia’ on 27 and 28 September 2017 which led to this article and this Special Issue.
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