NCJ Number
123295
Journal
Law and Human Behavior Volume: 14 Issue: 2 Dated: (April 1990) Pages: 105-122
Date Published
1990
Length
18 pages
Annotation
De facto departures from the law code (de jure) have been noted in such areas as jury revolts, jury nullification, extralegal concerns, and insanity.
Abstract
The thesis developed here is that (a) when such departures have occurred in insanity cases, a critical rather than instructive view of jurors has prevailed; (b) this critical view impedes efforts to empirically understand jurors' constructs of insanity and thereby restricts considered legal changes; (c) the Insanity Defense Reform Act of 1984 is illustrative of such narrowly considered changes, and based on empirical findings, this act fails to instruct jurors or produce verdicts different from its predecessors' and (d) based on empirical findings the common sense construals of sane and insane do emerge, complex though they be. Suggestions toward an empirically derived "common law" test of insanity, one that harmonizes legal, psychological, and common sense perspectives are offered. 1 note, 85 references. (Author abstract)