The right to a fair trial /
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Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due |
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CSHL Library | 347.735 RIG 2005 (Browse shelf) | Available |
The origins of trial by jury / by William Forsyth
The creation of the Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial / by R. Carter Pittman
The right to a speedy trial is a fundamental right / by Earl Warren
The right to trial by a local jury / by Steven A. Engel
The right to counsel / by Alfredo Garcia
The public does not have the right to attend criminal trials / by Potter Stewart
Defendants do not have the right to private trials / by Harry Blackmun
Local trials serve the interests of the community / by Steven A. Engel
The right of the accused to confront witnesses is not absolute / by Sandra Day O'Connor
The scope of the accused's right to counsel has been narrowed / by Benjamin F. Diamond
Media coverage undermines the fairness of trials / by Richard K. Sherwin
Informed jurors can be impartial / by Newton N. Minow
Terrorism suspects should be tried by military tribunals / by Peter J. Wallison
Terrorism suspects should not be tried by military tribunals / by the Economist
Jury nullification : democracy in action or anarchy? / by Julius J. Marke
Appendix. The origins of the American Bill of Rights ; Supreme Court cases involving the right to a fair trial
Traces the evolution of the 6th Amendment through documents and Supreme Court rulings to reveal the ongoing effort to define the exact meaning of the text and apply its abstract concepts to real-world cases
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