Are the post arrangements concerning jury trial sufficiently flexible to cope with the trials of members of ethnic minorities or cases of serious fraud?

Authors Avatar

Law Assignment

Lim Keng Thai

   Are the post arrangements concerning jury trial sufficiently flexible to cope with the trials of members of ethnic minorities or cases of serious fraud?

  The English legal system is not entirely dominated by legal professionals, for laypersons have been involved in the administration of justice in various ways. One prominent aspect of the courts involving the use of laypersons is the jury system. This system relies on twelve randomly selected ordinary persons, aged between eighteen and seventy, without legal knowledge to decide on criminal law cases and civil cases (defamation, malicious prosecution, fraud and imprisonment). Unlike judges who are arbiters of law, juries are essentially arbiters of facts, taking into account the law explained by the judge. Over the years, this system has attracted considerable praise due to its democratic structure showing the involvement of society in carrying out justice. This point was expounded in R v Sussex JJ ex p McCarthy (1924): “justice should not only be done, but be seen to be done”. While these praises take into account the role of the jury in general, how far are jury trials able to deal with cases involving members of ethnic minorities?

Join now!

  A better way to answer this question is to review the history of the British society. Prior to the 1600’s England was still a nation involved mainly in the affairs of Europe, and the development of its society and industry. That period was referred to as the industrial revolution, which beginning from a few agricultural based inventions eventually brought England to the status of an industrial power. At that juncture, England was almost entirely populated by white Europeans and had no empire yet. However, by the 1700’s things began to change. England, in order to search for new ...

This is a preview of the whole essay