2013 Law Review Symposium: The Civil Jury as a Political Institution: Value Judgments Through Damages
Abstract
The debate over the civil jury in the United States – in both the academic literature and public domain -- tends to focus on how good or bad it is as an adjudicative institution. But its justification has always been as a political institution. Though the civil jury’s role as a political institution has strong historical roots, its place in our contemporary political system has received relatively little, sustained scholarly attention. This Symposium aims to build on recent work taking a renewed look at the various justifications for the civil jury as a political institution: as an instrument of popular sovereignty, a vehicle for applying community norms in law, a source of democratic legitimacy, and a check on government and corporate power.
Document Type
Video
Publication Date
2-22-2013
Produced by
William & Mary Law School, Institute of Bill of Rights Law
Repository Citation
"2013 Law Review Symposium: The Civil Jury as a Political Institution: Value Judgments Through Damages" (2013). Video Archive. Video 54.
https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/videos/54
Comments
Play time: 51 minutes