The stories they tell, in munificent detail, take us to an exciting landscape of the life of the City in the making, unmaking, and remaking of criminal justice systems...the authors of this splendid treatise pursue with single-minded determination the varieties of 'historical sociology' perspectives that may help to explain 'the dramatic transformation' in two periods of American legal history (1800-45/1850-65) that mark the transition from 'jury trials to guilty plea'.. Upendra Baxi The King's College Law Journal, Vol 17, Issue 1 2006 ...supplies a fascinating history and a solid argument for a multifaceted explanation of the rise of plea-bargaining in the nineteenth century...Jury Trials underscores the value of historic data and bottom-up, contextualized research. (It is also interesting reading for anyone who researches contemporary issues of evidence and procedure..)...the data and conclusions of Jury Trials can inform critical analysis of jury trials and plea-bargaining in various jurisdictions today. Marny Requa British Journal of Criminology, Vol 46. No 5 Sept 2006 In their empirical analysis, Mike McConville and Chester L Mirsky retrace [jury trial and plea bargaining's] evolution from its beginning in the nineteenth century to the "post-revolutionary" period. Just like their methodology - which goes beyond a doctrinal study by basing results on solid data - their conclusions are original. Revue de Science Criminelle e de Droit Penal Compare 2007, No 4