Gary Edmond and
David Mercer, "The politics of jury competence", with commentaries
by David Bernstein and Ian Freckelton and a reply by the authors,
in Brian Martin (ed.), Technology and Public Participation
(Wollongong, Australia: Science and Technology Studies, University
of Wollongong, 1999).
The politics of jury competence[*]
Gary Edmond and David Mercer[*]
Abstract
There has been considerable recent debate
concerning the ability of juries to deal with complex scientific
issues. Critics of the jury have called for reform to counter
the supposedly socially and economically harmful effects
rendered by scientifically incompetent juries. As one might
expect, proposed solutions for these "problems" have included
calls for stricter rules for the admissibility of the scientific
evidence, tighter screening of the ethics of lawyers and
scientists, improved scientific literacy for judges and
jurors and restriction in opportunities for jury and lay
evaluation of science altogether. In our discussion we outline
the importance of escaping evaluations of the relationship
between democracy, the jury and science which are preoccupied
with measuring jury comprehension against an unproblematised
yardstick of "the correct scientific understanding." Drawing
from recent literature on the public understanding of science,
we sketch an alternative view of jury comprehension of science
which significantly reframes the issues for both proponents
and opponents of the jury. We conclude that assessment of
the competence of the jury to evaluate science is a contested
political domain.
1. Introduction
How appropriate is it for lay juries to evaluate scientific
and technical evidence? Most discussions of this question
have assumed that science provides a direct access to truth--a
positivist approach.[1] They have been
preoccupied with determining how to guarantee the clear transmission
of scientific knowledge from its scientific source to the
public and the clear reception (without distortion) of that
knowledge by the public. Within this framework the assessment
of the appropriate role for the jury has predominantly been
set against the question of whether or not the jury can be
considered scientifically competent. Supporters of the jury
have emphasised that juries display an adequate level of scientific
literacy to facilitate their important role in assessing matters
of science and technology. Other commentators contend that
the jury's role in these matters should be limited because
of its technical incompetence. There has been a failure, across
both sides of this debate, to consider what jury comprehension
of science means in more sociologically or philosophically
informed terms.
In the following discussion we provide an overview of the
arguments made by both proponents and opponents of the jury.
We outline a constructivist approach to the public understanding
of science, which considers the social negotiations involving
both experts and the public that determine what should count
as valid scientific and technical knowledge. This approach
reveals inadequacies in the viewpoints held by both proponents
and opponents of the jury. In our conclusion we reflect on
the importance of recognising the politically loaded nature
of assessments of the scientific competence of the jury.
Before embarking upon an examination of debates over jury
competence, a brief overview of the history, rationale, structure
and function of the jury serves as a prelude to our analysis.
2. The history and objectives of the jury
a. History of the jury
As early as the reign of the Tudors, the jury had begun to
instil itself in popular mythology as a champion of public
liberty against excessive or oppressive governmental demands.[2]
Seminal English cases such as Bushel and the Seven
Bishops Case gave the jury an overtly political character
and helped to entrench the jury as a form of lay participation
in the interpretation and operationalisation of the state's
laws.[3]
Yet, the jury's ability to incorporate public considerations
of morality and justice into the legal system--free from requirements
to act rationally and in accordance with the law--has led
to apprehension concerning its inconsistency and lack of accountability.[4]
The continued operation of the lay jury has not prevented
an active judiciary from developing doctrines which have provided
a means of circumventing public participation. Changes in
the admission standards for evidence combined with judicial
activism have functioned as important means of restricting
the influence of the jury.
b. Rationale for the jury
Public recognition of the political importance of the jury
owes much to a number of early obstinate jurors and juries
withstanding attempts at judicial/political impeachment.[5]
The dominant rationale for the continued operation of the
"modern" jury is as a check to political and judicial tyranny.
The jury is believed to provide a lay constraint on government
and the interpretation and application of laws determining
matters affecting the lives, liberties and reputations of
other citizens.[6] The participation of
the public provides a means of continual rejuvenation of the
jury, enabling the institution to retain vibrancy and relevance.[7]
c. Structure and function of the jury
Juries are generally composed of twelve (and sometimes as
few as four) members, selected randomly to listen to evidence
of varying kinds in an attempt to determine matters which
often dramatically impact upon the lives of the parties involved.
The jury is selected from a panel where lawyers, depending
upon jurisdiction, have varying opportunities to shape its
composition. Jurors are invariably strangers to each other
and (usually) to the parties, and are expected to have no
interest in the proceedings. During the trial the jury is
selectively exposed to arguments constructed by lawyers (and
often others) incorporating evidence and witnesses deemed
admissible by the judge. Without training, and guided in issues
of law by the presiding judge, jurors are expected to decide
issues of fact and apply them to legal standards. The jury's
eventual verdict is determined in camera and justifications
for the decision are not required nor provided. In most jurisdictions
the verdict must be unanimous. Failure to reach a decision
(hung jury) can lead to the swearing in of a new jury and
a completely new trial. After the trial, the jury is disbanded
and will never again function in that formal fact-finding
capacity. Appeals from jury verdicts are traditionally only
granted when interference or "obvious errors" have been deemed
to have taken place.
3. Current debates about the jury and science
a. Jury proponents
Those who defend the jury's role in cases involving scientific
and technical evidence can be roughly divided into four main
categories.
i. Moral/political defence of the jury
For those defending the jury on moral/political grounds,
juries are not obliged to employ rigid and legalistic interpretations
of the law.[8] Nor are they compelled to
accept the evidence of witnesses, even expert opinion evidence
from eminent sources. The jury is not obliged to accept any
of the competing expert claims and may legitimately reach
a decision on other grounds.[9] Kalven
and Zeisel, authors of the seminal text The American Jury,
suggested that juries were capable of disregarding evidence
and law to achieve a "just" solution, especially if they believed
one party had acted improperly. For example, where police
improperly or illegally obtained evidence, jurors might acquit
regardless of the strength of the case or "technical guilt"
as a form of relief from, and discipline for, improper conduct.[10]
Another important public function of the jury in the moral/political
framework (as well as a number of pro-jury perspectives, such
as in the following subsections ii and iii) is the effective
requirement that the testimony and evidence in trials must
be comprehensible to the lay public. That is, the institution
of the jury places a burden on the parties to present evidence
in a clear and simple manner, at the risk of alienating the
jury and displacing the legal system from the public domain.[11]
Research suggests that jurors do not simply accept the testimony
of those witnesses rated high on expertise.[12]
ii. The jury as scientifically competent.
In these approaches it is commonly asserted that: "the jury
often appears to do surprisingly well in the face of
complexity"[13] and "juries are one of
our society's most reliable decision-making institutions."[14]
Such assertions are normally supported by research suggesting
that the high level of convergence between jury and judicial
decisions on "appropriate" disposition of the same case (about
75-80%)[15] does not vary for cases selected
as complex.[16] Such high levels of agreement
have inspired some researchers to ask whether juries might
actually out-perform judges.[17]
It is also worth noting that, in this approach, the areas
of disagreement between judges and juries are normally not
interpreted as jury misunderstanding but the result of other
factors.[18] Juries are seen to be able
to act as a social "lightning rod" because of the relief they
provide for judges by assuming adjudicative roles.[19]
Significantly, juries remain most popular amongst the judiciary.
This suggests that at times the jury has the flexibility to
arrive at a decision a judge may desire but be unable to deliver--constrained
by legal conventions.[20] Apparent jury
incomprehension and misunderstanding are also occasionally
explained as a product of legal procedures and language rather
than the complexity of scientific and technical evidence.
[21]
Most jury supporters accept that there are areas of jury
administration and court procedure which could be modified
to enhance jury performance.[22] Such
reforms include allowing jurors to take notes during trials,
providing copies of transcripts and giving juries access to
expert reports or court-appointed experts, pre-trial instructions,
simpler instructions and allowing juries to keep a copy of
the charges and instructions.[23]
In addressing criticism of jury performance based on apparent
inconsistency and unpredictability, some jury supporters have
explained that those cases which eventually reach jury trial
are generally the most closely balanced and therefore the
most unlikely to reach settlement before trial.[24]
The type of case rather than jury deficiency is used to assist
in explaining difficulties in predicting or reconciling outcomes.[25]
Others have noted that often the close balance of competing
arguments for the variousp arties can make any verdict appear
as reasonable or "rational."[26] The more
restrictively judges apply admission criteria, the more coherent
any judicially manipulated jury verdict might appear. Conversely,
other commentators have celebrated the absence of jury verdict
consistency as an indication of genuine political independence.[27]
iii. Support for the jury conditional on enhanced judicial
gatekeeping
As mentioned earlier, the development of an independent jury
as an ostensible tribunal of fact emerged in conjunction with
a complex law of evidence to protect the jury from exposure
to certain types of information deemed to be inappropriate.[28]
Recently in the widely cited and extremely influential case
of Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,[29]
a majority of the US Supreme Court appeared to express confidence
in the institution of the jury, even in complex cases. Whilst
this case has been described as the "highpoint of recent international
expression of confidence in the intellect of juries," this
approach may also provide a means of eroding the jury evaluation
of disputed "knowledge claims."[30] The
emphasis on strict examination of expert evidence and rigorous
judicial screening outlined in Daubert allow the case
to be interpreted as a covert attempt to restrict the types
of evidence which can be presented to the jury, thereby undermining
an opportunity for public input in the evaluation of controversial
knowledges. Despite a (purportedly) broad confidence in juror
capabilities, the tightening of admission standards--via judicial
gatekeeping[31]--preventing evidence reaching
the jury, provides a means of surreptitiously shifting the
locus of decision-making away from juries whilst apparently
maintaining public support for, and confidence in, that institution.[32]
iv. Support for the jury conditional on improved scientific
literacy
The final category of support for the jury consists of those
who argue for the importance of the jury but decry the current
lack of scientific literacy in the general community, which
limits the ability of the average jury to competently evaluate
scientific and technical evidence.[33]
In these frameworks the problem of the jury is part of a general
community failure. The solution is to embark on improving
the public understanding of science across society. Proponents
of these views draw on traditions from both the left and right
of the political spectrum.[34] Many of
their arguments concerning the public understanding of science
are shared with those who desire the role of the jury and
current legal system limited in relation to the adjudication
of scientific and technical matters. The overt focus on scientific
literacy and the public understanding of science, characterised
by this position, will be discussed in more depth at a later
point.
b. Critics of the jury
For as long as the modern jury has been operating, there
has been intense debate over the ability of ordinary citizens
to understand legal and evidentiary issues involved in trials.[35]
For a long time there have been broad critiques of jury capacity:
Proclaiming that we have a government of laws, we have, in
jury cases, created a government of often ignorant and prejudiced
men.[36]
The debate over juror competence has been exacerbated in
recent years through an increase in the prevalence of technical
and scientific evidence.[37] Whilst
criticism of jury capacity has been a central feature in the
arsenal of jury critics, it appears to be most powerful when
targeting juror assessments of complex and/or conflicting
technical and scientific evidence.[38]
Part of the motivation for challenging juror competence and
seeking to exclude juries from trials which are deemed as
unsuitable is located in a belief that the majority of the
public is scientifically illiterate. This belief, underpinning
much of the critical jury literature, has been reinforced
through extensive surveys of formal scientific literacy conducted
in both the US and UK.[39] In their assault
on the jury in complex cases, jury critics often emphasise
this alleged public scientific illiteracy.[40]
Jurors are portrayed as inept.
Much of the largely anecdotal criticism attacking the competence
of the lay jury is based on apparent inconsistencies in trial
outcomes. So-called (mass) toxic tort cases (such as litigation
surrounding Bendectin[41] and breast implants)
in the US have attracted a great deal of interest as critics
portray juries as incomprehensibly and irrationally oscillating
in their preferences between plaintiff and defendant evidence
in ostensibly identical cases. Such variations are represented
as compelling evidence against the ability of lay juries to
"competently" evaluate complex and competing knowledge claims.[42]
In the context of wide publicity over an apparent "litigation
explosion" and "insurance crisis" surrounding tort law in
the US from the mid 1980s, critics blamed jury inconsistency
as one of the factors implicitly responsible for encouraging
speculative litigation and an influx of dubious or "junk science"
evidence in the court.[43] Ultimately
the effect of broadly publicised inconsistent trial outcomes
was portrayed to be undermining public confidence in the legal
system.[44]
The representation of the jury as incompetent and irrationally
sympathetic toward plaintiffs has led to criticisms that litigation
costs and tremendous damage awards severely impact upon the
productive capacity of US industry--reducing the availability
of putatively safe pharmaceuticals, medical devices and interventions.[45]
Not surprisingly, jury critics have a tendency to be politically
conservative and supporters of (and supported by) industry
and large corporations.[46]
The entrenched symbolic role of the jury, especially in criminal
trials, has meant that those favouring its abolition or substantial
reformation have pragmatically supported making admission
of expert testimony more demanding. The justification is that
more rigorous judicial gatekeeping would protect the jury
from much of the "junk science" which purportedly hinders
its ability to render rational verdicts. By enforcing more
restrictive criteria, judges could ensure that only mainstream,
"authentic" science appears in court, thus tremendously simplifying
the role of a credulous and incapable jury:
A compelling argument for conservatism lies in the need
to screen proffers of scientific evidence for `junk science'
claims that would distort the fact-finding if admitted into
evidence.[47]
However, most critics believe that merely tightening admissibility
rules will not resolve the problems.[48]
Whilst jury critics often advocate reform to standards for
admitting evidence, they usually propose alternatives to the
currently available jury trial. Various alternatives have
been suggested including blue-ribbon juries (composed of high
school, college and university graduates), blue-blue-ribbon
juries (composed of individuals with "relevant" or general
scientific training),[49] increasing use
of court-appointed experts and special masters,[50]
expert panels, science courts[51] and
more stringent professional regulation--to prevent certain
unacceptable or non-scientific knowledges from ever reaching
courts. Whilst some of the suggestions, such as masters and
technical advisers, might assist the jury, on the whole they
are predicated upon the unsupported belief that reaching a
certain threshold of technical or scientific literacy will
improve repeatability (the same verdict for allegedly the
same evidence).[52]
ŬIn addition, jury critics often favourably contrast the
capabilities and attributes of allegedly rational and competent
judicial verdicts to the random, unpredictable and idiosyncratic
outcomes of jury trials. This commitment is often supported
through the celebration of judicial attributes such as familiarity
with the law, tertiary education, experience and impartiality.
4. Reconceptualising jury "understanding" of science
Since the 1980s there has been renewed interest and research
undertaken on public understanding of science.[53]
Two main opposing perspectives can be identified. First, there
has been an approach which could be described as positivist--preoccupied
with the public's correct understanding and use of scientific
and technical knowledges. The other approach could be described
as constructivist--preoccupied with the social negotiations,
involving both experts and the public, that determine what
should count as valid scientific and technical knowledge.
Positivist approaches have been nurtured by concerns among
scientific organisations and industry lobby groups that there
has been a decline in their social authority in relation to
the planning of new technologies and the promotion of scientific
and technical education because of failure in the public understanding
of science.[54] Science policy researcher
Brian Wynne argues that this dominant concern with the legitimation
of science has encouraged those maintaining positivist approaches
to deploy simplistic images of science and equally simplistic
models for the public understanding of science. Such approaches
tend to treat the scientific source as correct without question,
whereas all non-scientific sources are open to scrutiny. Ideally,
in this picture, the ultimate meaning of a scientific message
remains intact no matter what forms and contexts it passes
through, until it is received by the unquestioning lay person
who soaks up the information. In a sense, the quality of the
communication channel can be measured according to the lack
of distortion introduced along the way, according to the competence
of the receiver to accurately decode the message. Problems
surrounding the receiver's competence and the clarity of the
message are open to examination. In contrast, there is no
consideration of the authority of the source, or the content
of the message. Problems in the construction of scientific
meaning are transformed into problems of communication and
comprehension. It is assumed that any active construction
of the content of the scientific message, other than at the
source, constitutes bias, distortion or misunderstanding.
The correct interpretation of any message is seen to be that
made by authoritative scientists and scientific institutions.
The various approaches to the role of the jury outlined in
section 3 of this chapter predominantly rely on the positivist
literacy deficit (PLD) model of the public understanding of
science outlined above. Critics of the jury draw attention
to the contradictory results of jury deliberations concerning
supposedly identical scientific evidence as support for the
lack of scientific literacy among juries. Even those not critical
of the jury implicitly assume the existence of a straightforward
notion of scientific literacy against which jury performance
may be measured. For example, jury proponents can be divided
between those who argue that the jury's scientific literacy
is sufficient to satisfy its role--usually compared to the
"rational" temper of judges--or, because of overriding political
reasons, the jury should be defended in spite of its literacy
deficit. The discussion to be developed below provides an
indication as to why the PLD model is inadequate.
Juxtaposed to the simplistic PLD model, alternative constructivist
approaches have emerged. Constructivist approaches have been
inspired by the sociology of scientific knowledge, insights
from anthropology, and various currents in sociological thought.[55]
This area of research shares a commitment to avoiding
a priori assumptions about what `proper' science is. Through
ethnography, participant observation, and in-depth interviews,
it attempts to examine the influence of social contexts
and social relations upon people's renegotiation of the
`science' handed down from formal institutions as if already
validated and closed. This general approach immediately
opens to question the very notion of what counts as a scientific-technical
issue or as scientific-technical knowledge.[56]
A number of key themes have emerged from these studies.
In the following discussion we outline these themes, drawing
attention to the ways they encourage a reconsideration of
dominant views of jury competence. a. Differences in scientific
"sources" of information, reconstruction and politics of simplification
In many instances, particularly in controversial areas such
as those generally arriving in legal forums, one simple closed
or coherent scientific message will not be available for reconstitution
into a form of public knowledge. Differing interpretations
of the state of a particular science at a public level may
merely reflect pre-existing disagreements. PLD models can
easily gloss over such differences by assuming there is one
simple correct scientific interpretation that can be transmitted
to the public. Such models can also play a political role
by allowing expert protagonists to claim that opposing views
represent populist distortions rather than views ultimately
drawn from competing experts. In the context of discussions
of jury competence, the jury can take on the role of a scapegoat
for a side losing in litigation. Jury competence is an easier
target than expertise.
PLD models gloss over the fact that the existence of scientific
viewpoints in legal contexts can shape the actual source of
scientific information. For instance, there has been a growth
in numerous law-science knowledge-making cultures which tailor
their knowledge and areas of research interest according to
the demands of legal institutions. The very constitution of
certain types of scientific knowledge such as forensic pathology[57]
can be shown to be shaped by the demands of legal/quasi-legal
institutions.[58] Recognising the role
of such law-science hybrids adds a further complexity to PLD
models of the jury because, in a sense, jury comprehension
constitutes part of the context against which such knowledges
are constructed.
The existence of hybrids also raises the importance of considering
the construction of science occurring at a number of points
across society and not just in expert settings.[59]
In these studies special attention has been dedicated to the
need to acknowledge that the process of stabilising scientific
knowledge claims involves the movement of such claims beyond
narrow expert contexts. This process involves the active reworking
of the meaning of scientific knowledge claims so that they
are tractable in various social and technological contexts.
Scientists from differing specialties may have slightly different
interpretations of the meanings of apparently identical scientific
concepts depending on the context at hand. This work implies
that it is unrealistic to look for any single source for the
meaning of scientific knowledge claims as this ignores the
active processes of construction which take place at numerous
locations including non-expert settings. The law-science hybrids,
where non-expert demands shape knowledge claims, are indicative
of processes which are a normal part of science. In the context
of the jury this work is important in highlighting the dynamic
processes occurring as scientific knowledges are reconstructed
into tractable terms for presentation to the jury--processes
which are more complex than some kind of distortion of the
original scientific message.
The reconstruction of scientific knowledge along a continuum
of sites can also be seen to have a number of important political
dimensions. According to Stephen Hilgartner, the image of
popularised/debased science (scientific knowledge produced
at a distance from its purer site of construction) has been
used to satisfy political aims in scientific controversy in
two main ways. First, the image of a debased currency of scientific
knowledge can be used by scientists in contrast to the correct
pure science undistorted by the path of popularisation, simplification
or pressures of policy. Second, scientists can demand the
right to pronounce on whether or not a simplification or popularisation
is appropriate. As Hilgartner puts it:
scientific experts enjoy great flexibility in public discourse.
On the one hand, when it suits their purposes, they can
issue simplified representations for broader audiences;
the notion of the appropriate simplification justifies this
practice and enables scientists to invest these representations
with the authority of the cultural symbol `science.' On
the other hand, scientists at all times can draw on the
notion of distortion to discredit publicly available representations.[60]
The politics of simplification are extremely important for
understanding the question of jury comprehension of science.
The necessary process of simplification involves the importation
of broader metaphors and narrative strategies. The use of
these strategies provides a vehicle for later recriminations
about processes of legal distortion and jury misunderstanding.
Problems in identifying a simple epistemological source for
images of science is not restricted to controversy involving
specific knowledge claims. It has been observed that in some
contexts there can be difficulties in identifying a simple
consensus in defining the more general features of science.
A good example is debate over the nature of the "scientific
method." Surveys indicate that scientists rarely reflect on
abstract definitions of scientific method in their day-to-day
work. On those rare occasions when they do, that reflection
is not undertaken in a particularly coherent way.[61]
This debate has also been played out in legal settings such
as in the cases involving creation science[62]
or the recent US Supreme court Daubert[63]
decision. In both contexts, courts attempted to define the
nature of the scientific method. These attempts have been
subjected to considerable criticism in legal and philosophical
circles.[64] Challenges to the legitimacy
of juries playing a role in scientific cases, because of difficulties
anticipated in their ability to understand the scientific
method, appear superficial when the difficulties in achieving
an authoritative consensus on the nature of the scientific
method are recognised.[65]
b. Trust and identification.
Another important factor to consider in relation to the public
understanding of science has been the observation that members
of the public do not evaluate knowledge claims in isolation
from their experiences and perceptions. In this context Mike
Michael has emphasised the need to distinguish between the
knowledge and judgment of particular areas of science and
more general perceptions of the idea of science.[66]
It would appear that whilst members of the public have confidence
in science, even as a synonym for truth via tacit notions
of progress, method and norms,[67] in
specific contexts they have been more reluctant to accept
scientific claims emanating from supposedly authoritative
scientific institutions and individuals.
It might be expected, following from the above discussion,
that juries evaluate the specific scientific knowledge claims
of institutions and individuals, at least in part, according
to their ability to identify with and "trust" them. The evaluation
of institutions and their knowledge together opens up the
opportunity to consider the social contexts in which various
forms of knowledge are generated and put to use, rather than
treating scientific knowledges as made up of artificially
isolated events frozen in time and isolated from any kind
of social context.[68] Jury consideration
of science constitutes a process of social deconstruction
and renegotiation of knowledge claims rather than a simplistic
process of competence or incompetence. Writers such as Wynne
and Irwin have emphasised this as an important factor in helping
to explain public resistance to nuclear power, despite the
construction of elaborate quasi-legal public rituals by the
state and nuclear industry in an attempt to establish public
"acceptance."
An example where this process may have operated can be drawn
from considering the well known paternity case involving the
famous actor Charlie Chaplin. A jury found that Chaplin should
be held responsible for fathering a child even though blood
test evidence was presented which appeared to challenge this
assessment. Critics of jury comprehension of science such
as Huber celebrate this as an example of sentimental absurdity
and jury incompetence. Jasanoff in Science at the Bar
draws from Saks to suggest an alternative explanation--that
the jury decision was a "socially rational" judgment reflecting
social mores of the time. Chaplin was a wealthy man and treated
the mother of the child as if she were his wife; paternal
obligations, therefore, should still apply. In such a context,
jury sensitivity to uncertainties in scientific claims might
be expected.[69]
c. Differentiated publics and the importance of tacit
knowledge
In constructivist (and some PLD) accounts of the public understanding
of science there has been a call to acknowledge that the public
is differentiated, or that there are "publics" in regard to
science. Certain segments of the public are more interested
or attentive to scientific and technical issues than others.[70]
Factors influencing attentiveness include formal education,
gender[71] and direct personal involvement
in matters involving the negotiation of the meanings of scientific
and technical knowledges. Such differentiated public interpretations
of specific areas of science will also be strongly influenced
by differentiated tacit knowledges of the specific context
at hand and tacit knowledge of science more generally. Past
experiences, expectations and immediate experience are welded
together in an active process of translation and reconstitution.
Depending on the context, various members of the public will
exhibit more or less interest in specific scientific matters
for a variety of reasons. They may also, by incorporating
local tacit knowledges, develop understandings of science
different to those of experts. A number of recent case studies
have appeared exploring these processes at work in the construction
of lay interpretations of medical knowledge such as menstruation,
safe sex, cholesterol and Down's syndrome, amateur sciences
such as astronomy and ornithology, and industrial and workplace
hazards such as those due to nuclear power and chemical plants.[72]
The impact of these points is rather complex. In theory,
juries are brought together without prior knowledge of the
specific case at hand, retain anonymity, and should reflect
a representative cross-section of the broader community. In
most cases juries are drawn from a cross-section of the public
with relatively diverse tacit knowledges. On a preliminary
assessment these factors make it difficult to transport concepts
such as attentive publics and tacit knowledge to the jury
context and it will be difficult to ascertain how prior tacit
knowledge of the particular jurors has influenced the formulation
of any particular jury decision. There is, nevertheless, a
broader sense in which the concepts "attentive publics" and
"tacit knowledge" possess relevance. In a sense, through participating
in the legal process, the jury becomes a de facto attentive
public. The jury is expected to rapidly learn about the specific
scientific viewpoints of the protagonists. Their evaluation
of such positions will in turn be influenced by impressions
of the importance of their role in the general and particular
administration of justice and confidence in, and commitment
to, the polity. Jury assessments may be affected by broader
shared tacit knowledges of science, tacit knowledge of the
operation of the legal system, the perceived seriousness of
juror roles and jurors' responses to public perceptions of
social problems. These observations also overlap with our
earlier discussion of institutional identification and trust.
Belief that the jury provides a site for public education
about specific scientific issues hints at the difficulties
involved in making generalisations about the conclusions made
by juries that do not take into account the specific features
of the case at hand and how it is presented to them.
5. Conclusion: the politically contested nature of the
concept of jury competence
There are a number of implications for public participation
flowing from a constructivist approach to jury competence.
The first is that there is no simple basis on which competence
may be determined. We would contend, nevertheless, that recognising
this implication does not lead to complete idealism or nihilism
in which all knowledge claims are treated as equally valid.[73]
Rather, evaluating competence inescapably involves social/political
judgments. In some contexts the role of judgment may become
largely invisible--such as where there is a high level of
agreement in relation to the trustworthiness of individuals,
institutions and the efficacy of their knowledge(s). However,
juries typically work in contexts where there is a lack of
consensus over these very issues. Ascribing or denying competence
to jury decisions is a highly charged political activity.
Claims about competence/incompetence are used by protagonists
in legal contexts to both legitimate and delegitimate jury
decisions. For many jury critics, the general image of incompetence
is most commonly deployed to delegitimate the role of the
jury absolutely. For others, including many jury proponents,
it is jury competence in the specific context that is most
regularly challenged. There are broader political implications
in recognising the politically charged nature of competence.
For those working in an Enlightenment positivist framework,
images of jury competence have regularly been linked to images
of democratic capability. According to this approach, maintaining
the jury system is dependent on improving the scientific literacy
of the lay public to achieve democratic outcomes:
Citizens who train themselves to read and understand the
primary sources, the original scientific studies, can participate
meaningfully; those who do not, cannot.[74]
Within such frameworks, disbanding or restricting public
participation in the jury might not constitute a challenge
to democratic processes if the public is unlikely to attain
the requisite degree of competence. The legitimatory rhetoric
of competence disguises points of political conflict in contemporary
society. For instance, the occasional fragmentation and political
conflict between expert knowledges and the important interplay
between lay and expert understandings of science and technology--in
short, the fundamentally political nature of modern science
and technology--are disguised.
The failure to recognise and deal with the political nature
of jury competence could well create problems for those wishing
to maintain the social authority of the legal system. Using
a strict technocratic model to deny the jury input into decision
making provides a challenge to notions of democracy in which
the public has a right to shape decisions which directly affect
them. It also implies that contemporary science and technology
are beyond the grasp and control of the public. Such a situation
might contribute to the development of polarised public responses--drawing
from romantic perspectives--calling for the total rejection
of science and technology.[75] Challenging
jury competence in relation to specific decisions could also
lead to problems of legitimacy for legal institutions. The
conclusions drawn by juries can be influenced by the contingencies
in the knowledge-making setting. Our earlier discussion highlighted
the importance of public understandings of science linked
to contingencies such as tacit knowledge, trust and institutional
identification, simplification and exposition. Uncritical
notions of competence deny the complexities involved in deriving
legal decisions in relation to science and technology. Ironically,
denying these contingencies leaves legal institutions vulnerable
to criticisms of denying themselves a textured means of explaining
the outcome of their decisions. The failure to adequately
problematise scientific knowledge and the notion of its public
understanding, as is the case in the dominant discourse on
jury competence, has meant institutions anxious to maintain
their public authority by promoting the public understanding
of science may be contributing to the opposite outcome.
[76]
Commentary by David Bernstein[*]
Edmond and Mercer identify three justifications for the use
of civil juries. The first is that the collective wisdom of
six to twelve individuals from a cross-section of the community
is more likely to lead to an objectively correct result than
is a lone judge's ruminations. This view, while plausible
with regard to run-of-the-mill cases, is almost certainly
mistaken with regard to toxic tort cases and other civil cases
involving complex scientific evidence.[77]
A second reason that juries might be preferable to judges
is that juries are perceived to be a check on legal rigidity.
Juries are expected to base their verdicts on "extralegal
values" or "their sense of justice."[78]
A jury can therefore legitimately punish Charlie Chaplin's
sexual misconduct by finding he was the father of an illegitimate
child, even though genetic tests showed this was impossible.
But if the Chaplin verdict was correct, then jury trials are
no more than popularity contests, and the rule of law is reduced
to a mere rhetorical device.
Finally, sundry sociologists of science, such as Sheila Jasanoff
and, apparently, Edmond and Mercer, believe that in the absence
of a consensus over the trustworthiness of various
"claimants to knowledge," it makes far more sense to allow
scientific decisions to be made democratically through juries
than to allow the technocratic elite to make them. It must
be realised, however, that consensus is no real standard at
all. Given the diversity and breadth of the scientific (and
pseudo-scientific) community, and the financial incentives
for experts involved in major product liability cases, consensus
is extremely rare.
The availability of important products including vaccines,
contraceptives and medical-grade silicone has been threatened
by US jury verdicts. Allowing scientifically ignorant jurors
to determine whether these products are to be available makes
absolutely no sense from a public health point of view. I
would be content to allow Edmond and Mercer the option of
letting a random sampling of the public to vote on whether
their families may have access to such products. On
the other hand, I believe the rest of us to be very much entitled
to use these products regardless of the upshot of the whim,
superstition and "sense of justice" of sundry panels composed
of six to twelve of our fellow citizens.
Fortunately, over the last decade or so, US judges have become
increasingly interested in ensuring that legal decisions actually
conform to the underlying evidence. This inevitable result
has been a welcome decline in the authority of civil juries.
Commentary by Ian Freckelton[*]
The debate about the jury's capacity to process the complexities
of scientific evidence adequately has an analogy in the game
of cricket. The focus in criminal trials on the jurors is
like the focus in cricket on the batsmen. But one can also
factor into the evaluation process the condition of the ball,
the state of the pitch, the skills of the bowler, the impact
of the home ground, the effect of a supportive crowd and even
the role of the umpire. If the focus of inquiry is solely
or even predominantly on the batsmen's ability to bat, the
inquiry risks losing perspective.
The fundamental question in the context of jurors being able
to grapple effectively with scientific evidence is how to
regulate the delivery of information to lay decision makers
to maximise their chances of dealing adequately with it. The
persons responsible for this are expert witnesses, lawyers
and judges. That their several performance at times have left
something to be desired does not necessarily reflect upon
the juror's competence at all.
For over a century, what has characterised the debate about
juror competence is a remarkable lack of empirical information--a
defect that has not deterred in the slightest advocates of
juror competence or of juror incompetence from making assertions
in support of their positions.
The passion engendered by the debate arises primarily from
the symbolic significance attributed by many to the role of
the jury as a populist bulwark against judicial and executive
tyranny. Commentators have also highlighted the imperative
for jurors to "get it right" when processing information that
may result in erroneous conviction or acquittal. Both notions
are unrealistically positivist and encumbered by unhelpful
romanticism.
There is no shortage of examples of "rogue" forensic scientists
and of poor scientific practice which was only exposed by
the legal system too late for those convicted. In the United
States there have been controversies aplenty in the last decade,
for example about the evidence of the discredited footprint
expert Louise Robbins[79] and about the
forensic assertions of odontologist Michael West.[80]
In England forensic science's travails have been prominently
exemplified in the IRA bombing cases where partisan and inaccurate
information was presented to juries in relation to explosives'
analysis. In Australia, inadequate forensic science has come
to the fore in the royal commissions into the Splatt and Chamberlain
cases and then in relation to the evidence given by "Bomber
Barnes," the former Deputy Director of Australia's largest
forensic science laboratory in Victoria, in relation to gunshot
residue.[81]
The problems of the evidence have included abandonment of
neutrality, poor record-keeping, adoption of questionable
techniques, bad methodology, use of tests still under development,
failure to disclose inconsistent results and failure to submit
to proper peer review processes. How is the jury to learn
of such matters? By effective and informed cross-examination
and by contrary expert evidence. In countries such as Australia
and New Zealand, where the pools of experts available to the
defence are shallow in the extreme, especially with the death
by attrition of legal aid, the role of lawyers in keeping
the scientists honest has become all the more important. The
truth, though, is that trial lawyers' record as the fourth
estate of the criminal courtroom has been far from formidable.
If the scientific understanding of the lawyers is blurred,
both judge and jury will be left with a mass of scarcely understandable
data, generating the potential for miscarriages of justice.
It may be that a combination of initiatives is necessary:
improvement in scientific competence and communication; more
judicial involvement to clarify issues in dispute; courts
appointing their own experts in cases that require such a
measure; enhancement of trial lawyers' competence to make
expert witnesses accountable; and introduction of procedures
to enhance the capacity of lay decision makers to arrive at
their decisions on the basis of reasoned evaluation.
Response by Gary Edmond and David
Mercer
The responses by Bernstein and Freckelton rely upon idealised
images of law and science and their interaction. For Bernstein
there is an implicit appeal to a resolution to scientific
debate available to be invoked by rational judges or technocratic
elites. For Freckelton, the "problem" can be resolved (or
at least substantially reduced) by improving the communication
of science to lay audiences and improving scientific and legal
practices, such as eradication of scientific fraud and requiring
competent cross-examination. Both commentators fail to grapple
with occasions when scientific experts disagree. In cases
where experts disagree, obtaining yet another expert opinion
is unlikely to offer any decisive benefit over drawing from
the opinion of a lay person.
These difficulties have been clearly displayed in the failure
of science courts to achieve widespread scientific, legal
and public acceptability. Science court proposals have received
criticism for assuming that the use of court-like procedures
would be able to separate scientific facts from social preconceptions.
One problem is that for a scientist to gain sufficient authority
to pronounce in an authoritative way on a matter of scientific
controversy, such a scientist is normally already a participant
in the controversy in question. Selecting "scientist-judges"
or "experts" who possess scientific authority but are not
simultaneously embroiled in the proceedings is difficult.
Further, selection of scientist-judges without prior involvement
may well lead to inconclusive and/or non-authoritative conclusions.
This highlights divisions within the so-called technocratic
elite. In this context, Bernstein's position is contradictory.
Whilst Bernstein accepts that "[given] the diversity and breadth
of the scientific (and pseudo-scientific) community, and the
financial incentives for experts involved in major product
liability cases, consensus is extremely rare," he retains
an unexplicated confidence in the ability of a so-called technocratic
elite to resolve such issues.
It is also worth noting that Freckelton does not engage with
our position and Bernstein uncharitably misrepresents us.
With respect to Bernstein, nowhere in our discussion do we
contend that juries are "more likely to lead to an objectively
correct result than is a lone judge's ruminations" nor that
juries should base their verdicts solely on extralegal values
or their sense of justice. Rather it has been our intention
to argue that the choice of who should adjudicate between
competing (expert) opinions is intrinsically political.
Footnotes
[*] The following discussion focuses on
common law jurisdictions (e.g. Australia, New Zealand, US,
UK, Canada). For a more detailed discussion of similar themes
see G. Edmond and D. Mercer, "Scientific literacy and the
jury: reconsidering `jury competence'," Public Understanding
of Science, Vol. 6, 1997, pp. 329-357.
[*] Drawing from shared backgrounds in
the history and philosophy of science, Gary Edmond and David
Mercer have published a number of papers exploring the interactions
of law and science in contemporary society. Gary Edmond is
currently enrolled in a PhD at Cambridge University. He took
a BA (Hons) from the University of Wollongong, receiving the
University Medal, and then completed a law degree with first
class honours from the University of Sydney where he was ranked
first in his final year. Dr David Mercer is a lecturer in
Science and Technology Studies at the University of Wollongong.
Apart from law and science, his interests include the public
understanding of science, scientific and technological controversy,
and science and technology policy. His doctoral research investigated
the debate surrounding the risks of electric and magnetic
fields focusing on the construction of science-public policy
in the Gibbs Powerline Inquiry. The authors are listed alphabetically.
[1]. American Bar Association, Jury
Comprehension in Complex Cases (Chicago: ABA, 1989).
[2]. J. Stone and W. A. N. Wells, Evidence:
Its History and Policies (Sydney: Butterworths, 1991),
pp. 16-22; J. Hunter and K. Cronin, Evidence, Advocacy
and Ethical Practice: A Criminal Trial Commentary (Sydney:
Butterworths, 1995), pp. 96-145.
[3]. M. Galanter, "The civil jury as regulator
of the litigation process," University of Chicago Legal
Forum, 1990, pp. 201-271.
[4]. New South Wales Law Reform Commission,
The Jury in a Criminal Trial: A Discussion Paper for Community
Consultation (Sydney, 1985), p. 48.
[5]. E. P. Thompson, "Trial by jury," New
Society, Vol. 50, 1979, pp. 501-502; A. de Tocqueville,
Democracy in America, Vol. I (New York: Alfred A. Knopf,
1963, 9th ed.), pp. 280-287; V. Hans and N. Vidmar, Judging
the Jury (New York: Plenum Press, 1986), p. 114.
[6]. P. Devlin, Trial by Jury (London:
Stevens, 1956), p. 164; G. Mungham and Z. Bankowski, "The
jury in the legal system," in P. Carlen (ed.), The Sociology
of Law (Keele: Sociological Review Monograph, 1976), p.
217.
[7]. V. P. Hans, "Attitudes toward the
civil jury: a crisis of confidence?" in R. Litan (ed.), Verdict:
Assessing the Civil Jury System (Washington, DC: The Brookings
Institution, 1993), pp. 248-281, at pp. 248-249; P. H. Schuck,
"Mapping the debate on jury reform," in ibid., pp. 306-340,
at pp. 328-329.
[8]. Hans and Vidmar, op. cit., p. 116.
[9]. R. J. Allen, "Unexplored aspects
of the theory of the right to trial by jury," Washington
University Law Quarterly, Vol. 66, 1988, pp. 33-45, at
p. 35; C. A. G. Jones, Expert Witnesses: Science, Medicine,
and the Practice of Law (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994),
p. 119. However, Jones discusses the concern raised by such
practices. See also R v Duke (1979) 22 SASR 46 at 48.
[10]. H. Kalven and H. Zeisel, The
American Jury (Boston: Little, Brown, 1966), p. 165.
[11]. Lord Roskill, Fraud Trials Committee
Report (London: HMSO, 1986), p. 196.
[12] S. S. Diamond and J. D. Casper, "Blindfolding
the jury to verdict consequences: damages, experts, and the
civil jury," Law & Society Review, Vol. 26, 1992,
pp. 513-563, at p. 558.
[13]. R. Lempert, "Civil juries and complex
cases: taking stock after twelve years," in Litan, op. cit.,
pp. 181-247, at p. 182 [emphasis added]; J. S. Cecil, V. P.
Hans and E. C. Wiggins, "Citizen comprehension of difficult
issues: lessons from civil jury trials," American University
Law Review, Vol. 40, 1991, pp. 703-774, at pp. 729-734,
744-745, 750-753; N. Vidmar, "Are juries competent to decide
liability in tort cases involving scientific/medical issues?
Some data from medical malpractice," Emory Law Journal,
Vol. 43, 1994, pp. 885-911; M. S. Jacobs, "Testing the
assumptions underlying the debate about scientific evidence:
a closer look at juror `incompetence' and scientific `objectivity',"
Connecticut Law Review, Vol. 25, 1993, pp. 1083-1115.
[14]. M. J. Saks, "Do we really know anything
about the behavior of the tort litigation system--and why
not?" University of Pennsylvania Law Review, Vol. 140,
1992, pp. 1147-1291, at p. 1239; Hans, op. cit., p. 274.
[15]. It is worth briefly acknowledging
that the tendency to use the judge as a "yardstick" for evaluations
of jury competence has been subject to criticism: Cecil, Hans
and Wiggins, op. cit., pp. 762, 764; A. Kapardis, Psychology
and Law (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997),
pp. 130-131; R. MacCoun, R., "Inside the black box: what empirical
research tells us about decisionmaking by civil juries," in
Litan, op. cit., pp. 137-180, at p. 164; Kalven and Zeisel,
op. cit., pp. 9, 11.
[16]. Kalven and Zeisel, ibid.
[17]. MacCoun, op. cit., pp. 166-67, 177;
Lempert, op. cit., p. 219.
[18]. Hans and Vidmar, op. cit., p. 118.
There are many similarities with the work of J. Baldwin and
M. McConville, Jury Trials (Oxford: Clarendon, 1979).
[19]. Saks, op. cit., pp. 1230-1231; Hans,
op. cit., p. 265.
[20]. E. Knittel and D. Seiler, "The merits
of trial by jury," Cambridge Law Journal, Vol. 30,
1971, pp. 316-325, at p. 321.
[21]. Lempert, op. cit., pp. 191-192,
196, 201, 204, 208; R. E. Litan, "Introduction," in Litan,
op. cit., pp. 1-21, at p. 11; R. W. Harding, "Jury performance
in complex cases," in M. Findlay and P. Duff (eds.), The
Jury Under Attack (Sydney: Butterworths, 1988), pp. 74-94,
at pp. 90-91.
[22]. New South Wales Law Reform Commission,
The Jury in a Criminal Trial: A Discussion Paper for Community
Consultation (Sydney, 1985), p. 133; New South Wales Law
Reform Commission, Criminal Procedure Report: The Jury
in a Criminal Trial (Sydney, 1986), p. 87.
[23]. L. Heuer and S. Penrod, "Increasing
juror participation in trials through note taking and question
asking," Judicature, Vol. 79, 1996, pp. 256-262; G.
T. Munsterman, "A brief history of state jury reform efforts,"
Judicature, Vol. 79, 1996, pp. 216-219.
[24]. See J. A. Henderson and T. E. Eisenberg,
"The quiet revolution in products liability: an empirical
study of legal change," UCLA Law Review, Vol. 37, 1990,
pp. 479-553, at pp. 491, 534-535.
[25]. Schuck, op. cit., p. 308.
[26]. Lempert, op. cit., p. 202.
[27]. Baldwin and McConville, op. cit.,
p. 131.
[28]. Schuck, op. cit., pp. 310, 319;
E. R. Sunderland, "The inefficiency of the American jury,"
Michigan Law Review, Vol. 13, 1915, pp. 302-316; Hans,
op. cit., p. 249.
[29]. 113 S.Ct. 2786 at 2798 (1993).
[30]. I. Freckelton, "Expert evidence
and the role of the judiciary," Australian Bar Review,
Vol. 12, 1994, pp. 73-106, at pp. 77-78, 84, 85, 90, 105.
[31]. G. Edmond and D. Mercer, "Keeping
`junk' history, philosophy and sociology of science out of
the courtroom: problems with the reception of Daubert v
Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc," University of New
South Wales Law Journal, Vol. 20, 1997, pp. 48-100.
[32]. Consider F. J. Ayala and B. Black,
"Science and the courts," American Scientist, Vol.
81, 1993, pp. 230-239, p. 230.
[33]. A. Wildavsky, But Is It True?
A Citizen's Guide to Environmental Health and Safety Issues
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1995), pp. 395-409.
[34]. A. Irwin, Citizen Science: A
Study of People, Expertise and Sustainable Development
(New York: Routledge, 1995), pp. 9-17.
[35]. New South Wales Law Reform Commission,
1985, op. cit., pp. 14, 41; Schuck, op. cit., p. 307; S. Daniels,
"The question of jury competence and the politics of civil
justice reform: symbols, rhetoric and agenda-building," Law
and Contemporary Problems, Vol. 52, No. 4, 1989, pp. 279ff.
[36]. J. Frank, Law and the Modern
Mind (New York: Bretano's, 1930), p. 178. Compare, P.
Robertshaw, Judge and Jury: The Crown Court in Action (Aldershot:
Dartmouth, 1995), pp. 200-201; B. S. Oppenheimer, "Trial by
jury," University of Cincinnati Law Review, Vol. 11,
1937, pp. 141-147, at p. 142.
[37]. H. Zeisel, "The debate over the
civil jury in historical perspective," University of Chicago
Legal Forum, 1990, pp. 25-32, at p. 30.
[38]. L. Hand, "Historical and practical
considerations regarding expert testimony," Harvard Law
Review, Vol. 15, 1901, pp. 40-58, at pp. 54-56.
[39]. B. Wynne, "Public understanding
of science," in S. Jasanoff, G. E. Markle, J. C. Petersen
and T. Pinch (eds.), Handbook of Science and Technology
Studies (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 1995), pp. 361-388,
at pp. 365-370.
[40]. P. W. Huber, "Junk science and the
jury," University of Chicago Legal Forum, 1990, pp.
273-302, at p. 273; L. Loevinger, "Science and legal rules
of evidence. A review of Galileo's Revenge: Junk Science
in the Courtroom," Jurimetrics Journal, Vol. 32,
1992, pp. 487-502, at pp. 501-502; Note, "Confronting the
new challenges of scientific evidence," Harvard Law Review,
Vol. 108, 1995, pp. 1481-1605, at pp. 1583, 1585. Compare
G. Edmond and D. Mercer, "Manifest destiny: law and science
in America," Metascience, No. 10, 1996, pp. 40-58.
[41]. G. Edmond and D. Mercer, "The secret
life of (mass) torts: the `Bendectin litigation' and the construction
of law-science knowledges," University of New South Wales
Law Journal, Vol. 20, 1997, pp. 666-706.
[42]. D. E. Bernstein, "Junk science in
the United States and the Commonwealth," Yale Journal of
International Law, Vol. 21, 1996, pp. 123-182, at p. 180;
M. Kersten, "Preserving the right to jury trial in complex
cases," Stanford Law Review, Vol. 32, 1979, pp. 99-120.
[43]. P. W. Huber, Galileo's Revenge:
Junk Science in the Courtroom (New York: Basic Books,
1991), p. 3; D. Quayle, "Civil justice reform," American
University Law Review, Vol. 41, 1992, pp. 559-569, at
p. 565.
[44]. P. W. Huber, "Junk science and the
jury," University of Chicago Legal Forum, 1990, pp.
273-302, at pp. 297, 296, 293.
[45]. Interestingly, much of the empirical
research tends to undermine such claims. See V. P. Hans and
W. S. Lofquist, "Jurors' judgments of business liability in
tort cases," Law and Society Review, Vol. 26, 1992,
pp. 85-115; B. J. Ostrom, D. B. Rottman and J. A. Goerdt,
"A step above anecdote: a profile of the civil jury in the
1990s," Judicature, Vol. 79, 1996, pp. 233-248.
[46]. M. Galanter, "Reading the landscape
of disputes: what we know and don't know (and think we know)
about our allegedly contentious and litigious society," UCLA
Law Review, Vol. 31, 1983, pp. 4-71.
[47]. E. J. Chan, "The `brave new world'
of Daubert: true peer review, editorial peer review,
and scientific validity," New York University Law Review,
Vol. 70, 1995, pp. 100-134, at p. 102.
[48]. Bernstein, op. cit., p. 181.
[49]. D. Drazan, "The case for special
juries in toxic tort," Judicature, Vol. 72, 1989, pp.
292-303.
[50]. Fed. Rules Evid. Rule 706 U.S.C.A.
[51]. B. Caspar and P. Wellstone, "Science
court on trial in Minnesota," in B. Barnes and D Edge (eds.),
Science in Context: Readings in the Sociology of Science
(Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1982), at p. 250. See also
A. Kantrowitz, "Democracy and Technology," in C. Starr
and C. Ritterbush (eds.), Science, Technology and the Human
Prospect (New York: Pergamon Press, 1980), pp. 199-211,
at p. 199; K. G. Nichols, Technology on Trial (Paris:
OECD, 1979), pp. 97-101.
[52]. Note, "The case for special juries
in complex civil litigation," Yale Law Journal, Vol.
89, 1980, pp. 1155-1176, at p. 1159.
[53]. A. Irwin and B. Wynne, Misunderstanding
Science? (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996);
B. Barnes, About Science (Oxford: Basil Blackwell,
1985); D. Nelkin, Selling Science (New York: Freeman,
1994); also M. C. LaFollette (ed.), Quality in Science
(Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1982); P. Slovic, Fischhoff and
S. Lichtenstein, "The psychometric study of risk perception,"
in V. T. Covello, J. Menkes and J. Mumpower (eds.), Risk
Evaluation and Management (New York: Plenum Press, 1986);
D. Mercer, "Science, technology and democracy on the STS agenda:
review article," Prometheus, Vol. 16, No. 1, 1998,
pp. 81-91.
[54]. Wynne, op. cit., pp. 362-363; Irwin,
op. cit., pp. 9-36.
[55]. U. Beck, Risk Society (London:
Sage, 1992); A. Giddens, Modernity and Self-Identity: Self
and Society in the Late Modern Age (Cambridge: Polity,
1991). Irwin, op. cit., pp. 43-52.
[56]. Wynne, op. cit., p. 375.
[57]. R. Smith and B. Wynne (eds.), Expert
Evidence (London: Routledge, 1989), p. 15.
[58]. S. Jasanoff, Science at the Bar
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1995); D. Mercer,
"The NIEMR/EMF Controversy: The Social Construction of Scientific
Knowledge and Science Policy in the `Gibbs' Powerline Inquiry
1990/91," PhD Thesis, University of Wollongong, 1993.
[59]. J. R. Ravetz, Scientific Knowledge
and its Social Problems (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
1971), pp.181-208; B. Latour, Science in Action: How to
Follow Scientists and Engineers through Society (Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press, 1987); T. Shinn and R. Whitley
(eds.), Expository Science (Dordrecht: D. Reidel, 1985).
[60]. S. Hilgartner, "The dominant view
of popularisation: conceptual problems, political uses," Social
Studies of Science, Vol. 20, 1990, pp. 519-539, at p.
523.
[61]. M. Mulkay and N. Gilbert, "Putting
philosophy to work: Karl Popper's influence on scientific
practice," Philosophy of the Social Sciences, Vol.
11, 1981, pp. 389-407; B. Wynne, "Knowledges in context,"
Science, Technology, & Human Values, Vol. 16, 1991,
pp. 111-121, p 114; M. Hamm, "Textbook portrayals of science
and technology: issues in a television age," Science, Technology,
& Human Values, Vol. 16, 1991, pp. 88-98.
[62]. McLean v. Arkansas 529 F.
Supp. 1255 (1982) and Edwards v. Aguillard 107 S.Ct.
2573 (1986).
[63]. 113 S.Ct. 2786 (1993).
[64]. G. Edmond and D. Mercer, "Recognising
Daubert: what judges should know about falsificationism,"
Expert Evidence, Vol. 5, Issues 1 & 2, 1996, pp.
29-42; P. Quinn, "The philosopher of science as an expert
witness," in J. Cushing, C. Delaney and G. Gutting (eds.),
Science and Reality: Recent Work in the Philosophy of Science
(Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press, 1984).
[65]. See the dissent of US Chief Justice
Rehnquist in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
113 S.Ct. 2786.
[66]. Mike Michael, "Lay discourses of
science: science-in-general, science-in-particular, and self,"
Science, Technology, & Human Values, Vol. 17, 1992,
pp. 313-333; D. Mercer, "Understanding Scientific/Technical
Controversy," Science and Technology Policy Research Group,
University of Wollongong, Occasional Paper No. 1, 1996; G.
Edmond, "Down by science: context and commitment in
the lay response to incriminating scientific evidence during
a murder trial," Public Understanding of Science, Vol.
7, 1998, pp. 83-111.
[67]. Jasanoff, op. cit., pp. 3-4.
[68]. B. Wynne, Rationality and Ritual:
The Windscale Inquiry and Nuclear Decisions in Britain
(Chalfont St. Giles: British Society for the History of Science,
1982), Chapter 7.
[69]. Huber, 1991, op. cit., pp. 148-149;
Jasanoff, op. cit., p. 11.
[70]. K. Prewitt, "The public and science
policy." Science, Technology, & Human Values, Vol.
7, 1982, pp. 5-14; J. D. Miller, "Scientific literacy: a conceptual
and empirical review," Daedalus, Vol. 112, 1983, pp.
29-48.
[71]. J. Ziman, "Public understanding
of science," Science, Technology, & Human Values, Vol.
16, 1991, pp. 99-105, at p. 103.
[72]. Irwin and Wynne, op. cit.
[73]. B. Barnes, The Elements of Social
Theory (London: UCL Press, 1995), pp. 110-111.
[74]. Wildavsky, op. cit., p. 408.
[75]. Beck, op. cit.
[76]. Wynne, 1995, op. cit., pp. 364-365.
[*] David Bernstein is an Assistant Professor
at George Mason University School of Law, where he teaches
Evidence and Environmental Regulation. Professor Bernstein
is a graduate of Yale Law School and has served as Research
Fellow in the Julius Silver Program in Law Science and Technology
at Columbia University School of Law.
[77]. As I am limited to 500 words of
commentary, I direct the reader to my article "Procedural
tort reform: lessons from other nations," Regulation, No.
1, 1996, at p. 67, for a detailed argument on this point.
[78]. E.g., Marc Galanter, "The regulatory
function of the civil jury," in Robert E. Litan (ed.), Verdict:
Assessing the Civil Jury System (Washington, DC: The Brookings
Institution, 1993), pp. 88-90 .
[*] Barrister-at-Law, Victoria, NSW, Qld,
SA, ACT and Tas.
[79]. M. Hanson, "Believe it or not,"
American Bar Association Journal, Vol. 79, June 1993,
p. 64.
[80]. M. Hanson, "Out of the blue," American
Bar Association Journal, Vol. 82, February 1996, p. 50.
[81]. See Ian Freckelton, "Judicial attitudes
toward scientific evidence: the antipodean experience," University
of California Davis Law Review, Vol. 30, No. 4, 1997,
pp. 1139-1227.
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