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Full-Text Articles in Legal History
Function Over Form: Reviving The Criminal Jury's Historical Role As A Sentencing Body, Chris Kemmitt
Function Over Form: Reviving The Criminal Jury's Historical Role As A Sentencing Body, Chris Kemmitt
University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform
This Article argues that the Supreme Court, as evinced by its recent spate of criminal jury decisions, has abandoned the criminal jury known to the Founders and, in so doing, has severely eroded the protections intended to inhere in the Sixth Amendment jury trial right. It then proposes one potential solution to this problem.
According to the Supreme Court, this recent line of cases has been motivated by the need to preserve the "ancient guarantee" articulated in the Sixth Amendment under a new set of legal circumstances. Unfortunately, the Court misinterprets the ancient guarantee that it is ostensibly attempting to …
Article V: Changing Dimensions In Constitutional Change, Francis H. Heller
Article V: Changing Dimensions In Constitutional Change, Francis H. Heller
University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform
To anyone raised under the Constitution of the United States, that document's declaration that it is "the supreme law of the land" may appear as a commonplace assertion. In some other nations the constitution is not viewed as law, but is seen as a primarily political document. In fact, some foreign constitutions are formally proclaimed to be "political constitutions." The writers of the American Constitution were well aware that they were engaged in fashioning an arrangement for the exercise of political functions and the peaceful adjustment of political conflict. And, however much validity there continues to be to de Tocqueville's …