The jury, a central institution of the trial process, exemplifies in popular perception the distinctiveness of our legal tradition. Nevertheless, juries today try only a small minority of cases. A Trying Question traces the history of the jury in Canada and links its nineteenth-century decline to the rise of the professional class.
R. Blake Brown shows that juries could be controversial, as they could be stacked and were often considered a nuisance by those who had to serve. With the legal profession's expansion, many saw them as amateur, ineffective, and unnecessarily expensive bodies that ought to be supplanted by those trained to sift through and correctly interpret evidence.
A Trying Question's fascinating history outlines the ways in which lay people became less involved in Canada's legal system and illustrates how judges, rather than jurors drawn from the community, would come to find verdicts in most court cases.
By:
R. Blake Brown Imprint: University of Toronto Press Country of Publication: Canada Edition: 2nd Revised edition Dimensions:
Height: 237mm,
Width: 159mm,
Spine: 28mm
Weight: 680g ISBN:9781442640382 ISBN 10: 1442640383 Series:Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History Pages: 416 Publication Date:30 October 2009 Audience:
College/higher education
,
Professional and scholarly
,
Primary
,
Undergraduate
Format:Hardback Publisher's Status: Active
R. Blake Brown is a professor of history at Saint Mary’s University.