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In the Absence of a Jury: Examining judge-alone trials

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

In the Absence of a Jury: Examining judge-alone trials

Contributors:

By (Author) Elisabeth McDonald

ISBN:

9781988503349

Publisher:

Canterbury University Press

Imprint:

Canterbury University Press

Publication Date:

2nd May 2022

Country:

New Zealand

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Criminal law: offences against the person

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

376

Dimensions:

Width 210mm, Height 297mm

Description

Calls for changes to the trial process in rape cases, including removing the jury as decision-maker, have been consistent over time and across jurisdictions. Victims and survivors of sexual violence, their supporters, law reformers, researchers and academics from many disciplines have advocated for the removal of the jury from rape trials for many years. Some claim it is indeed the panacea for all that is unacceptably brutal in the current trial process, with the jury being described as the cause of most of the damage done. Anecdotal evidence, and some research, suggests that in judge-alone trials cross-examination is shorter, there is less reliance on the real rape schema, and the issues at trial are more focussed. It is also likely that judge-alone trials involve fewer delays and pre-trial appeals, and that the hearings are not as disrupted (for example, by the need for legal argument in the absence of the jury). Research also indicates a difference in verdict choices between judges and juries in the specific context of cases involving allegations of sexual violence, with the behaviour of the complainant being seen as contributory fault. Further, the way counsel conducts their case may vary when the judge is the decision-maker, which may impact on trial outcome. Due to the continued widely-held view that replacing the jury with some other entity will have the effect of decreasing the negative impact on the complainant as a witness in the trial process (along with other desired effects such as reducing the decision-makers reliance on rape myths and misconceptions), it is important that empirical research is available to inform future public debate. This book records the results of such research.

Reviews

By carefully comparing judge-alone with jury trials, Professor McDonald reflects that while there may be some positive variations with judge-alone trials, format alone does little to protect rape complainants from damaging and distressing attacks on credibility and other forms of cross-examination based on rape myths and judicial and prosecutorial intervention is far more limited than might have been expected. This is a must read for all involved in the handling of sexual violence allegations in contemporary criminal justice systems, in and beyond Aotearoa New Zealand. Julia Quilter, University of Wollongong; On their own terms, and particularly when situated alongside her prior pioneering study of jury trials, McDonalds findings are urgent and important. In particular, they illustrate the extent to which barriers to justice both procedural and substantive experienced by rape complainants across jurisdictions will not be resolved merely by removal of the jury. Instead, progress requires an ambitious whole-system response that interrogates the broader dynamics of the adversarial criminal trial, and in particular its propensity to expose rape complainants to distress and dubious myths. The book is vital reading for academics and law-makers alike, both in and beyond Aotearoa. Vanessa Munro, University of Warwick; McDonalds earlier published research exposed the prevalence of rape myths in New Zealands jury trials and has already influenced the current Governments legislative response to sexual violence. In this sequel research ... her findings bring the experience of complainants in rape cases into the sunlight, and may startle those not already familiar with the criminal trial process. Every book McDonald writes in this area becomes required reading for those working in our criminal justice system or who are concerned about how it approaches allegations of sexual violence. This latest is no exception. Andrea Ewing, criminal lawyer

Author Bio

Elisabeth McDonald MNZM is an independent legal researcher and Adjunct Professor of Law at the University of Canterbury. She has taught and published in the areas of sexual and family violence, law and sexuality, criminal law and the law of evidence for over 30 years, as an academic and as the Policy Manager for the evidence law reference at the New Zealand Law Commission. Elisabeth is the author of a number of evidence law textbooks and online legal resources, including Rape Myths as Barriers to Fair Trial Process (2020), and is co-editor of From Real Rape to Real Justice (2011) and Feminist Judgments Aotearoa: Te Rino, the Two-Stranded Rope (2017).

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