Juries in U.S. Patent Cases: A Comparative Portrait of the Boundaries of Democracy
“It is clear that juries will necessarily differ in ‘competence,’ but it is at best incongruous to suggest that a society that sends its citizens routinely into space could never produce a jury competent to determine a case some judge might consider too ‘complex’ for people with ‘common experience’ to decide.”
- Author: M. Neil Browne, Nancy K. Kubasek, and Alex Q. Jacobs
- Cite: M. Neil Brown et al., Juries in U.S. Patent Cases: A Comparative Portrait of the Boundaries of Democracy, 20 N.C. J.L. & Tech. 199 (2018), //journals.law.unc.edu\/ncjolt/wp-content/uploads/sites/4/2018/12/KubasekFinal.pdf.
- PDF: //journals.law.unc.edu\/ncjolt/wp-content/uploads/sites/4/2018/12/KubasekFinal.pdf
- Volume: Volume 20, Issue 2