Evidence - Principles, Policy and Practice
Fiona Raitt(Author)
W.Green (Publisher)
4th Edition
Published on 23. July 2008
Book
Paperback/Softback
394 pages
978-0-414-01588-3 (ISBN)
Description
This text builds upon earlier editions of Evidence in the Greens Concise Scots Law series but is a new textbook offering a fresh approach to the law of evidence. It focuses on how the key features of the adversarial system influence the way that evidence is gathered, assessed and used in the civil and criminal courts. Evidence - Principles, Policy and Practice provides broad coverage of the principles and concepts of evidence and sets these within a contemporary policy context. It takes account of the growing body of law from the European Court of Human Rights, considers the particular impact this has had on our adversarial system of justice, and anticipates areas of future development and law reform. Case law and statutory provisions are discussed to illustrate principles, as well as to present strategies and arguments and to identify the scope for reform. The text is designed to meet the needs of both law students and legal practitioners.
More details
Edition
4th Revised edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Edinburgh
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Sweet & Maxwell Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
Revised edition
ISBN-13
978-0-414-01588-3 (9780414015883)
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Schweitzer Classification
Content
The adversarial system: Oral testimony; fact construction; judicial discretion; impact of ECHR jurisprudence. Concepts of evidence: relevancy; admissibility and exclusionary rules; sufficiency and corroboration. Witnesses: competence and compellability; credit and cross-examination; reliability and weight. Children and other vulnerable witnesses. Expert witnesses and opinion evidence. Proof: burdens of proof, standard of proof, presumptions and judicial knowledge. Corroboration: Moorov doctrine / distress. Conduct of the proof or trial. The exclusionary rules: Improperly obtained evidence: confessions and goods; Character, including sexual history evidence; Hearsay; Privilege, including legal professional privilege and public interest immunity.