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Article
The French Jury at a Crossroads
UF Law Faculty Publications
  • Valerie P. Hans, Cornell Law School
  • Claire M. Germain, University of Florida Levin College of Law
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2011
Abstract

This article describes the contemporary landscape of the French jury. Putting the institution in its historical and political context, it begins with an overview of the rich history of the French jury. We describe the earliest form of community judgment in France, the introduction of a formal jury system following the French Revolution, and the political and legal influences that transformed it from an independent body of lay citizens to a mixed decision-making body of professional and lay judges. We next identify characteristic features of contemporary French jury trial procedure and the respective roles and responsibilities of professional and lay judges, and then summarize the appellate procedure. After reviewing current debates about the merits of lay participation in the French legal system, we close with some reflections about the future of this storied institution.

Citation Information
Valerie P. Hans & Claire M. Germain, The French Jury at a Crossroads, 86 Chi.-Kent L. Rev. 737 (2011), available at http://scholarship.law.ufl.edu/facultypub/157