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The criminal trial is under attack. Traditional principles have
been challenged or eroded; in England and Wales the right to trial
by jury has been restricted and rules concerning bad character
evidence, double jeopardy and the right to silence have been
substantially altered to "rebalance" the system in favour of
victims. In the pursuit of security, particularly from terrorism,
the right to a fair trial has been denied to some altogether. In
fact trials have for a long time been an infrequent occurrence,
most criminal convictions being the consequence of a guilty plea.
Moreover, while this very public struggle over the future of the
criminal trial is conducted, there is also a less publicly observed
controversy about the significance of trials in modern society.
Trials are under normative attack, their value being doubted by
those who seek different kinds of process - conciliatory or
restorative - to address the needs of victims and move away from
the imposition of state power through trials and punishments. This
book seeks to develop a normative theory of the criminal trial as a
way of defending the importance of trials in our criminal justice
system. The trial, it is suggested, calls defendants to answer a
charge and, if they are criminally responsible, to account for
their conduct. The trial is seen as a communicative process through
which the defendant can challenge claims of wrongdoing made against
him, including the norms in the light of which those claims are
made. The book develops this communicative theory by first making a
careful study of the history of trials, before moving on to outline
the theory, which is then developed through chapters looking at the
practices and principles of trials, alternative regulatory models,
the roles of participants, the relationship between investigation
and trial and trials as public fora.
What are the aims of a criminal trial? What social functions should
it perform? And how is the trial as a political institution linked
to other institutions in a democratic polity? What follows if we
understand a criminal trial as calling a defendant to answer to a
charge of criminal wrongdoing and, if he is judged to be
responsible for such wrongdoing, to account for his conduct? A
normative theory of the trial, an account of what trials ought to
be and of what ends they should serve, must take these central
aspects of the trial seriously; but they raise a number of
difficult questions. They suggest that the trial should be seen as
a communicative process: but what kinds of communication should it
involve? What kind of political theory does a communicative
conception of the trial require? Can trials ever actually amount to
more than the imposition of state power on the defendant? What
political role might trials play in conflicts that must deal not
simply with issues of individual responsibility but with broader
collective wrongs, including wrongs perpetrated by, or in the name
of, the state? These are the issues addressed by the essays in this
volume. The third volume in this series, in which the four editors
of this volume develop their own normative account, will be
published in 2007.
The trial is central to the institutional framework of criminal
justice. It provides the procedural link between crime and
punishment, and is the forum in which both guilt and innocence and
sentence are determined. Its continuing significance is evidenced
by the heated responses drawn by recent government proposals to
reform rules of criminal procedure and evidence so as to alter the
status of the trial within the criminal justice process and to
limit the role of the jury. Yet for all of the attachment to trial
by jury and to principles safeguarding the right to a fair trial
there has been remarkably little theoretical reflection on the
meaning of fairness in the trial and criminal procedure, the
relationship between rules of evidence, procedure and substantive
law, or the functions and normative foundations of the trial
process. There is a need, in other words, to develop a normative
understanding of the criminal trial. The book is based on the
proceedings of two workshops which took place in 2003, addressing
the theme of Truth and Due Process in the Criminal Trial. The
essays in the book are concerned with the question of whether, and
in what sense, we can take the discovery of truth to be the central
aim of the procedural and evidential rules and practices of
criminal investigation and trial. They are divided into four parts
addressing distinct but inter-related issues: models of the trial
(Duff, Matravers, McEwan); the meaning of due process (Gunther,
Dubber); the meaning of truth and the nature of evidence (Jung,
Pritchard); and legitimacy and rhetoric in the trial (Burns,
Christodoulidis).
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