id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_nsz2d5ohfbfcne2ebw5bqcath4 Lori Chambers A Trying Question: The Jury in Nineteenth-Century Canada By R. Blake Brown 2010 4 .pdf application/pdf 1408 127 62 Review of [A Trying Question: The Jury in • A Trying Question: The Jury in Nineteenth-Century Canada • A Trying Question: The Jury in Nineteenth-Century Canada • A Trying Question: The Jury in Nineteenth-Century Canada • Mohawks on the Nile: Natives among the Canadian Voyageurs in Egypt 1884-1885 The jury remains a central symbol of justice and, writes Brown, "holds a cherished place in the legal imagination of many Canadians." (p. The Jury in Nineteenth-Century Canada, Brown explores the decline of the jury in responsible government had been established in either Upper Canada or Nova In the second part of A Trying Question Brown explores the impact of responsible government on the jury as an institution, and on public ideas about jurors 171) He argues that reforms in jury selection in Upper Canada continued to arouse placed on the use of trial juries; in Ontario, Nova Scotia and Upper Canada/Ontario, ./cache/work_nsz2d5ohfbfcne2ebw5bqcath4.pdf ./txt/work_nsz2d5ohfbfcne2ebw5bqcath4.txt