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Full-Text Articles in Law
Batson, Empowerment And New Jury Models: The Case For ‘Open Inquiry’, Patrick C. Brayer
Batson, Empowerment And New Jury Models: The Case For ‘Open Inquiry’, Patrick C. Brayer
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This 2009 article recommends the practice technique of “open inquiry,” which encourages attorneys and courts to ask jurors to openly identify their race, gender, and ethnicity during voir dire for purposes of appellate review under Batson v. Kentucky and related holdings. An open inquiry helps protect the rights of all jurors to sit. It thus creates a greater chance that juries are more diverse and promotes more voices and experiences during deliberation. The open inquiry method also promotes individual juror participation and increases the group's receptiveness toward individual voices during deliberations. Most importantly, open inquiry forces practitioners to rethink how …
Venue In Missouri After Tort Reform, David J. Achtenberg
Venue In Missouri After Tort Reform, David J. Achtenberg
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Venue matters. Anyone who doubts it need only look to the venue wars waged in the Missouri Supreme Court during the last decades. Understandably, plaintiffs prefer unrestrictive venue rules so that they can file and try their cases in counties with plaintiff-friendly jury pools. Just as understandably, defendants prefer rules that restrict plaintiffs' ability to choose between multiple venues and, to the extent possible, rules that permit the defendant to select the counties in which they can be forced to defend their actions.
The passage of Missouri's 2005 Tort Reform Act represented an important legislative victory for defendants in this …