The right to silence, or the privilege against self-incrimination, has long been recognised as an important procedural protection for the accused in the criminal process. The legislature of New South Wales, however, has introduced legislation to curtail that right by allowing for adverse inferences to be drawn at trial from the pre-trial failure of the accused to mention a fact later relied on in his defence. This article considers this legislative change in comparative context, drawing on the experience of interference with the right to silence in the Republic of Ireland, in England and Wales and in the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights. Particular attention is paid to the interaction between the right to silence and the righ...
As the European Court of Human Rights has come to qualify the privilege against self-incrimination a...
The so-called right to silence ia a two-fold : in relation to the pre-trial stage (out-of-court) sil...
This thesis studies the right to silence and proposes restricting the right to pre-trial silence in ...
The right to silence, or the privilege against self-incrimination, has long been recognised as an im...
It has been held that the right of silence is implicit in the right to a fair trial expressed in the...
The right to silence, or privilege against self-incrimination, which is protected by the common law,...
This article sheds comparative and contextual light on European and international human rights debat...
This research focuses on whether the right to silence should have been abolished. The ‘right to sile...
ThisarticleshedscomparativeandcontextuallightonEuropeanandinternationalhuman rights debates around t...
The New South Wales government has now enacted section 89A of the Evidence Act 1995 (NSW), which wil...
In response to problems encountered in the administration of justice in Northern Ireland, the Britis...
The right to silence, or privilege against self-incrimination, which is protected by the common law,...
This article employs probability theory to make sense of the authorities of Australia, the United Ki...
The right to silence is both a fundamental and a controversial element of the legal process. Suspect...
As the European Court of Human Rights has come to qualify the privilege against self-incrimination a...
The so-called right to silence ia a two-fold : in relation to the pre-trial stage (out-of-court) sil...
This thesis studies the right to silence and proposes restricting the right to pre-trial silence in ...
The right to silence, or the privilege against self-incrimination, has long been recognised as an im...
It has been held that the right of silence is implicit in the right to a fair trial expressed in the...
The right to silence, or privilege against self-incrimination, which is protected by the common law,...
This article sheds comparative and contextual light on European and international human rights debat...
This research focuses on whether the right to silence should have been abolished. The ‘right to sile...
ThisarticleshedscomparativeandcontextuallightonEuropeanandinternationalhuman rights debates around t...
The New South Wales government has now enacted section 89A of the Evidence Act 1995 (NSW), which wil...
In response to problems encountered in the administration of justice in Northern Ireland, the Britis...
The right to silence, or privilege against self-incrimination, which is protected by the common law,...
This article employs probability theory to make sense of the authorities of Australia, the United Ki...
The right to silence is both a fundamental and a controversial element of the legal process. Suspect...
As the European Court of Human Rights has come to qualify the privilege against self-incrimination a...
The so-called right to silence ia a two-fold : in relation to the pre-trial stage (out-of-court) sil...
This thesis studies the right to silence and proposes restricting the right to pre-trial silence in ...