A citizens' jury (CJ) is a method to aid decision-making by public bodies,
and is loosely based on the idea of a criminal jury. Ordinary members of th
e public, acting in their capacity as citizens concerned with the public go
od rather than consumers concerned with private interest, are drawn togethe
r to reach a public decision. The jury is independent, and its verdict is e
xpected to carry some authority, derived from an understanding that the jur
y is representative, and the deliberation is satisfactory. A CJ was organis
ed as part of a larger UR study which also conducted a contingent valuation
survey on broadly the same valuation issue, land use in a former wetland r
egion in Cambridgeshire, UK. A major aim of the study was to investigate wh
ether CJs allow views of a different kind to those captured by contingent v
aluation surveys to be expressed - views couched in terms of public benefit
s, right and wrong, and the common good. If this is true, CJs offer a promi
sing forum for articulating views, and even recommending decisions, about p
ublic goods including environment features. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V.
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