Jury Bias Based on Defendant Demographics
Keywords:
Jury Bias, Courtroom Psychology, Defendant Demographics, Implicit Bias, Legal Decision-Making, Criminal JusticeAbstract
Jury bias refers to the subconscious influence of stereotypes and prejudiced attitudes on juror decision-making, particularly when assessing guilt, credibility, and sentencing. Research shows that demographic traits such as race, ethnicity, gender, age, and socioeconomic status can significantly influence jury interpretations of evidence, perceived dangerousness, and moral blameworthiness. This paper examines how implicit cognitive processes, cultural beliefs, and structural inequalities shape jury bias across multiple legal systems. Using simulated cross-national data covering court trials in the United States, United Kingdom, India, and South Africa, the study identifies bias patterns affecting minority, lower-income, and gender-nonconforming defendants. A multi-layered reform framework is proposed to enhance impartiality through blind evidence review, juror education, diverse jury pools, and psychological screening for bias.

