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The history & development of the Special Criminal Court - 1921-2005.

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The history & development of the Special Criminal Court - 1921-2005. / Davis, Feargal.
Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2007.

Research output: Working paper

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@techreport{2565e9159bae40b39f221e4de228da32,
title = "The history & development of the Special Criminal Court - 1921-2005.",
abstract = "The Special Criminal Court consists of three judges sitting without a jury and hears cases when the ordinary courts are {\textquoteleft}inadequate{\textquoteright}. Generally this has involved terrorist offences, but recently it has been used against organized crime gangs – most notably those cases arising from the murder of Veronica Guerin. The author draws heavily on government archives and examines the justifiability of interfering with the right to trial by jury. Controversially, the author contends that the importance of the right to trial by jury has been grossly overstated, arguing that the key issue is not the presence or otherwise of a jury but rather the ability of any given trial process to deliver a fair trial. This book is the first comprehensive review of the history and development of the Special Criminal Court since Professor and former President Robinson{\textquoteright}s 1974 monograph.",
author = "Feargal Davis",
year = "2007",
language = "English",
publisher = "Four Courts Press",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Four Courts Press",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - The history & development of the Special Criminal Court - 1921-2005.

AU - Davis, Feargal

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - The Special Criminal Court consists of three judges sitting without a jury and hears cases when the ordinary courts are ‘inadequate’. Generally this has involved terrorist offences, but recently it has been used against organized crime gangs – most notably those cases arising from the murder of Veronica Guerin. The author draws heavily on government archives and examines the justifiability of interfering with the right to trial by jury. Controversially, the author contends that the importance of the right to trial by jury has been grossly overstated, arguing that the key issue is not the presence or otherwise of a jury but rather the ability of any given trial process to deliver a fair trial. This book is the first comprehensive review of the history and development of the Special Criminal Court since Professor and former President Robinson’s 1974 monograph.

AB - The Special Criminal Court consists of three judges sitting without a jury and hears cases when the ordinary courts are ‘inadequate’. Generally this has involved terrorist offences, but recently it has been used against organized crime gangs – most notably those cases arising from the murder of Veronica Guerin. The author draws heavily on government archives and examines the justifiability of interfering with the right to trial by jury. Controversially, the author contends that the importance of the right to trial by jury has been grossly overstated, arguing that the key issue is not the presence or otherwise of a jury but rather the ability of any given trial process to deliver a fair trial. This book is the first comprehensive review of the history and development of the Special Criminal Court since Professor and former President Robinson’s 1974 monograph.

M3 - Working paper

BT - The history & development of the Special Criminal Court - 1921-2005.

PB - Four Courts Press

CY - Dublin

ER -