Mark Coen and Niamh Howlin, ‘The Jury Speaks: Jury Riders in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries’

Abstract
Jury riders are statements that accompany verdicts. This article examines the use and contents of jury riders in Ireland and England in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It reveals the wide variety of contexts in which jurors appended statements to their verdicts and suggests a typology of jury riders in order to better understand the motivations behind such statements. It asks why jury riders survived into the twentieth century and considers the factors that led to riders’ ultimate decline.

Mark Coen and Niamh Howlin, The Jury Speaks: Jury Riders in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, American Journal of Legal History, https://doi.org/10.1093/ajlh/njy017. Published: 6 November 2018.

First posted 2018-11-11 11:14:31

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