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Re-Justifying the Fair Cross Section Requirement: Equal Representation and Enfranchisement in the American Criminal Jury |
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[View as PDF]
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116 Yale L.J. 1568 (2007)
This Note proposes a new justification for the fair cross section
(FCS) requirement governing criminal jury composition. While the Supreme Court has
defended the requirement by invoking demographic conceptions of the jury’s
legitimacy, many scholars have observed that this approach is at odds with
contemporary jury law and practice. This Note argues that courts should instead
defend the FCS requirement as a means of ensuring that eligible participants
are included in the jury franchise. Besides solving an intractable doctrinal
puzzle, an enfranchisement-based approach draws attention to ways in which
widespread juror selection practices exclude underrepresented groups and
thereby undermine the jury’s democratic character.
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