Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T15:45:04.050Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

American Juries: The Verdict. By Neil Vidmar and Valerie P. Hans. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2007. Pp. 428. $32.98 paper.

Review products

American Juries: The Verdict. By Neil Vidmar and Valerie P. Hans. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2007. Pp. 428. $32.98 paper.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

Edie Greene
Affiliation:
University of Colorado-Colorado Springs
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
© 2009 Law and Society Association.

Jury duty is not something many people relish. A jury summons conjures images of waiting for hours in a room that is too small and packed full of other unlucky citizens. But a closer look at the experience of jury duty and at the role of the jury in the American legal system reveals a remarkable institution, one that empowers ordinary citizens to undertake the extraordinary task of judging the actions of their fellow citizens. Reference Vidmar and HansVidmar and Hans, two leading experts on the jury, first described the origins and empirical social science research on juries in their classic 1986 book, Judging the Jury. In reuniting to write American Juries: The Verdict, the authors bring their coverage up to date.

Like its predecessor, American Juries provides a comprehensive, thorough, and accessible picture of the role of the jury in the American legal system. It covers a large empirical literature, intersperses famous cases (e.g., involving Andrea Yates, the McDonald's coffee spill, O. J. Simpson) with obscure cases to illustrate key points and reaches thoughtful conclusions on several controversial topics. It provides a useful foundation regarding different types of evidence and the “incredibly varied array of disputes” (p. 125) that juries resolve. Although the book is geared toward the interested and curious layperson rather than the jury scholar, trial lawyers will also be fascinated by its insights, and even experienced jury researchers might want this book for their libraries. Though no new data are reported, the book is an excellent compendium of research findings and analysis.

Vidmar and Hans's scope is broad, including issues that arise in composing the pool from which eligible jurors are chosen, jury selection in the courtroom, the complicated balance between defendants' constitutional right to fair trials and the media's right to cover those trials, as well as the impact of pretrial publicity on jurors' decisionmaking. The authors describe the scholarly research on jurors' abilities to understand complex scientific evidence that is ever-present in courtrooms today, the difficult moral dilemmas that arise in trials in which defendants claim they were insane at the time of the crime, and juries' capacities to rationally decide between life and death in the emotionally charged atmosphere of a capital trial.

On these topics and several others, the authors provide the appropriate legal context and then present a careful and nuanced review of the literature, including some critiques of existing studies. Most useful for the nonexpert are Vidmar and Hans's analysis and synthesis of the literature and their conclusions about the ability of jurors to dispense justice in an even-handed and predictable way. Especially intriguing are jurors' own words, gleaned from focus group discussions, post-trial interviews, and the filmed deliberations of Arizona juries, carried out as part of a project overseen by the Arizona Supreme Court in the 1990s. Most of the examples, though richly illustrative, are surprisingly mundane. They challenge the notion that juries are overly sympathetic to injured people and award damages in excessive amounts. For example:

In a trial in which the plaintiff injured in an automobile accident failed to follow his doctor's instructions:

He didn't get any of the medication filled for the 10 days after, and I see it hard that somebody that hurt as bad as he didn't do anything for 10 days. He didn't see a doctor for 15 days afterwards and that was when his wife finally made him go. (p. 293)

In a case involving alleged whiplash injuries:

A lot of people complain of it when they have an accident and a lot of lawsuits are won because you can't see it. I just figure when to go with a whiplash, a lot of times they don't have whiplash, but the first thing they think of is “Oh, my neck … like how much can I get for this one.” (p. 271)

Vidmar and Hans suggest that there are “many signs that the American jury is a sound decision maker in the majority of both civil and criminal trials” (p. 339), including the fact that judges tend to agree with juries in the vast majority of cases. They also point out some blemishes, including the struggle in many jurisdictions to bring together a cross section of community members to serve as jurors. (A jury composed of individuals with diverse backgrounds, life experiences, and world knowledge engages in more accurate fact-finding and thorough deliberation than a homogeneous jury.) Prejudice and stereotyping still make their way into the jury deliberation room. But despite these shortcomings, the authors believe that the verdict, on balance, “is strongly in favor of the American jury” (p. 346).

References

Vidmar, Neil, & Hans, Valerie P. (1986) Judging the Jury. New York: Plenum Press.Google Scholar