RT Article
T1 Gender and the Peremptory Challenge: Separating the Effects of Race and Gender in Jury Selection
JF Women & criminal justice
VO 31
IS 2
SP 159
OP 173
A1 DeCamp, Whitney
LA English
YR 2021
UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1751840956
AB Gender- and race-based discrimination in jury selection is unconstitutional in the United States. Nevertheless, court cases and empirical evidence suggest that discrimination on such characteristics, especially race, continues to occur through peremptory challenges. Statistical evidence of the gender effect, however, is more limited and has not previously incorporated controls in race-specific analyses to address non-gender-based explanations for gender differences. The present study examines gender differences in peremptory challenges using data from criminal jury trials in Mississippi. Race-specific analyses and propensity score matching are used to isolate the impact of gender from other measurable effects. Results indicate weak and non-significant gender differences for peremptory challenges used by the prosecution, and weak-to-moderate and non-significant gender differences for peremptory challenges used by the defense. This suggests that gender differences in the use of peremptory challenges may be the result of racial differences and other factors rather than a true gender-based effect.
K1 Race
K1 Propensity score matching
K1 peremptory challenge
K1 gender discrimination
K1 Gender
DO 10.1080/08974454.2020.1785372