Part I of this article traces the historical trends in the use of expert evidence in international disputes, from the scattered reliance on experts in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries to the ubiquity of experts in modern disputes. With that perspective, Part II examines how decision makers have attempted to ensure reliability of the expert evidence that is flooding the evidentiary records of international disputes, while Part III outlines the many problems that still remain. Finally, Part IV proposes a non-exhaustive and nonbinding checklist of questions for analyzing the reliability of any type of expert evidence
Testing the reliability of experts should be a key element of expert interviews. Using the Condorce...
At the beginning of the twentieth century, Learned Hand expressed concern at the assessment of exper...
This publication has recently found support from and apparently influenced the International Court o...
Part I of this article traces the historical trends in the use of expert evidence in international d...
This paper presents the results of empirical research conducted in context of a broader study on the...
The use of expert evidence in international commercial arbitration has continued to gain traction an...
In the past decade, international courts and tribunals have been increasingly facing scientific and ...
In a recent article on science and the law, Susan Haack suggested that “we could learn something fro...
This doctoral thesis aims to communicate the results of a study of the involvement of scientific exp...
The following contribution zeroes in on the diverging responses that permeate international adjudica...
Modern law on expert testimony insists, as a condition of admissibility, that the asserted expertise...
The opinion rule of exclusion and the use of expert testimony, like much of the law of evidence, dev...
The following contribution zeroes in on the diverging responses that permeate international adjudica...
Status of an expert in international commercial arbitration Abstract This thesis focuses on the role...
International litigation and arbitration hinges on the use (and, sometimes, misuse) of “authorities”...
Testing the reliability of experts should be a key element of expert interviews. Using the Condorce...
At the beginning of the twentieth century, Learned Hand expressed concern at the assessment of exper...
This publication has recently found support from and apparently influenced the International Court o...
Part I of this article traces the historical trends in the use of expert evidence in international d...
This paper presents the results of empirical research conducted in context of a broader study on the...
The use of expert evidence in international commercial arbitration has continued to gain traction an...
In the past decade, international courts and tribunals have been increasingly facing scientific and ...
In a recent article on science and the law, Susan Haack suggested that “we could learn something fro...
This doctoral thesis aims to communicate the results of a study of the involvement of scientific exp...
The following contribution zeroes in on the diverging responses that permeate international adjudica...
Modern law on expert testimony insists, as a condition of admissibility, that the asserted expertise...
The opinion rule of exclusion and the use of expert testimony, like much of the law of evidence, dev...
The following contribution zeroes in on the diverging responses that permeate international adjudica...
Status of an expert in international commercial arbitration Abstract This thesis focuses on the role...
International litigation and arbitration hinges on the use (and, sometimes, misuse) of “authorities”...
Testing the reliability of experts should be a key element of expert interviews. Using the Condorce...
At the beginning of the twentieth century, Learned Hand expressed concern at the assessment of exper...
This publication has recently found support from and apparently influenced the International Court o...