A Jury of Her Peers: The Impact of the First Female Jurors on Criminal Convictions
Abstract
This paper uses an original data set of more than 3000 cases from 1918 to 1926 in the Central Criminal Courts of London to study the effect of the Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act of 1919. Implemented in 1921, this Act made females eligible to serve on English juries,
providing a novel setting for studying the impact of female representation on jury verdicts. Results based on a pre-post research design imply that the inclusion of females had little
effect on overall conviction rates but resulted in a large and significant increase in convictions
for sex offenses and on the conviction rate differential between violent crime cases with
female versus male victims. The inclusion of women also increased the likelihood of juries
being discharged without reaching a verdict on all charges and the average time taken to reach
a verdict. A complementary analysis of cases in which the jury was carried over from a previous trial also implies that the inclusion of female jurors on the seated jury sharply increased conviction rates for violent crimes against women versus men.
Other description
JEL: K14, K40, N00, J10
Collections
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Date
2016-02Author
Anwar, Shamena
Bayer, Patrick
Hjalmarsson, Randi
Keywords
jury
gender
crime
convictions
deliberations
verdict
female
court
historical
victim
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
646
Language
eng