1977 | OriginalPaper | Chapter
Jury Size and Composition: An Economic Approach
Author : Alvin K. Klevorick
Published in: The Economics of Public Services
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Included in: Professional Book Archive
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The facilities and processes that governments provide for resolving legal disputes constitute an important public service. For the resolution of some of these disputes, society turns to a body of laymen—a jury. In considering the fury as a conflict-resolving instrument, several interrelated questions arise concerning the jury’s size, the way its members are selected, and the voting rule that it uses in reaching its decision. This paper presents a theoretical structure to help address these questions. The model, which uses a statistical decision-theoretic framework, is then used to examine the specific issue of how ‘representative’ a jury should be.