The Maureen and Mike Mansfield Center at the University of Montana provides academic courses, seminars, public lectures, conferences and cultural events to promote a better understanding of Asian and U.S.-Asian relations.
 

Read article on Mansfield Center visit with Japanese Prime Minister Koizumi

 

Prime Minister Koizumi with members of Mansfield Center and Foundation

 

Japanese Juries and Democracies Program

Mansfield Center, Law School to Play Role in Japanese Jury Training

Japan is in the middle of a dramatic reform of its judicial system that would have appealed to the democratic instincts of Mike Mansfield. In 2001, the Japanese Diet enacted the Saiban-In law ("Lay Assessors Act"), which takes effect in 2009. This law creates a new quasi-jury system in Japan whereby persons charged with major crimes will have both their guilt and sentence determined by a judicial panel composed of three professional judges and six lay persons, rather than by professional judges alone. Japan had a classic jury system briefly in the pre-war period, but the return to citizen participation in the judicial process is a big break with the past and signifies a bold commitment to promote democracy.

The Mansfield Center will join with colleagues at the UM School of Law, the Mansfield Foundation, and relevant Japanese organizations - including the Japanese Bar Association - to help prepare Japanese judges, prosecutors, defense lawyers and lay people prepare for this significant transition. The UM units will also join in collaborative research on the potentially far-reaching legal and social changes that ensue.

According to Robert Precht, who will co-direct a newly created Mansfield Center Juries and Democracy Program, the Lay Assessor's Act has ambitious goals, and Japan faces a number of challenges in implementing the new system. "For starters," he said, "the Japanese have no modern experience with juries. Thus, Lawyers and judges will have to learn new trial advocacy techniques adapted to persuading lay persons. Ordinary citizens who are not used to playing any role in the judicial process will also need to be educated about their new responsibilities and, in order to get their cooperation, there must be substantial efforts to explain the reasons for moving to this new system and why it is advantageous for all Japanese." "Finally," he said, "as judges and the other participants take on new roles, new criminal procedures and ethical guidelines will have to be developed."

The Mansfield Center saw the new reform as a fascinating opportunity to extend UM's involvement in Japan, according to its director, Terry Weidner, and felt the university was ideally situated to be involved in the project. "Mike Mansfield was probably the most respected American ambassador ever to serve in Japan," he said, "and the Mansfield name is still identified in Japan with honesty, integrity, and cultural sensitivity. As a Center dedicated to those same values, we engender more trust in Japan than some U.S. institutions." Involvement in training and research related to the Lay Assessor's Act also makes sense because it coincides with one of the great strengths of UM's Law School. "The Law School not only has a strong academic program in criminal law," Weidner said, "but a very strong track record in practical training programs related to criminal law, including U.S. style jury trials. This couldn't be a better fit."

According to UM Law School Professor Jim Taylor, the other Co-Director for the program, everyone involved on the Montana side sees this as a two-way street.  "We are excited to learn about the Japanese legal system, to make new colleagues, and to share what we know about our system of jury trials. There will be tremendous opportunities to exchange ideas and to create a new synergy between the two legal systems."  We think Mike Mansfield would approve.

 

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