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Journal

Decision-making

Cornell University Law School

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Reasoned Verdicts: Oversold?, Kayla A. Burd, Valerie P. Hans Apr 2018

Reasoned Verdicts: Oversold?, Kayla A. Burd, Valerie P. Hans

Cornell International Law Journal

Jurors are lay fact-finders, untrained in the complexities of law and legal rules, and yet reasoned verdicts require that their reasons conform precisely to the law. This difficulty is the impetus for additional interaction with the court, as jurors must often call on legal assistance when drafting their verdicts. This necessity undermines the independence and power of jurors and opens the door for external pressures and biases to encroach on jurors’ decisions. When judges overturn jury verdicts that they consider insufficiently reasoned, judges substitute their judgments for those of the jurors. In addition, reasoned verdicts may lead to post hoc …


Reflections On The Substance Of Finality , Geoffrey C. Hazard Jr. Apr 1985

Reflections On The Substance Of Finality , Geoffrey C. Hazard Jr.

Cornell Law Review

No abstract provided.


Precluding Appeals, Judith Resnik Apr 1985

Precluding Appeals, Judith Resnik

Cornell Law Review

No abstract provided.