Professor Mary R. Rose of the University of Texas at Austin School of Law and Department of Sociology, and colleagues, have published Goffman on the Jury: Real Jurors’ Attention to the “Offstage” of Trials, forthcoming in Law and Human Behavior. Here is the abstract:
“Social psychologist Erving Goffman, in his classic work The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, provides a framework that explains why jurors may turn their attention at the courthouse to information not formally presented from the witness stand. We dub this ‘offstage observation,’ a type of juror behavior that has not been systematically examined empirically. Analyzing a unique data source of 50 actual jury deliberations in civil trials, we find that jurors do look to the offstage in evaluating the claims of the parties. However, in contrast to predictions, these observations played a surprisingly minor role in the jury deliberation process.”
Tags: Criminal law information systems, Criminal procedure information systems, Empirical methods in legal informatics, Erving Goffman, Jurors' decisionmaking, Jurors' deliberations, Jurors' information behavior, Jurors' legal information behavior, Jurors' use of inadmissible information, Jurors' use of prohibited information, Jurors' use of unauthorized information, Jury decisionmaking, Jury deliberations, Law and Human Behavior, Legal decisionmaking, Legal decisionmaking systems, Legal evidence information systems, Legal information behavior, Offstage observation by jurors, Offstage observation in law, Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, Statistical methods in legal informatics