Comparative research of criminal justice systems is still in its infancy. It is not surprising, then, that when questions are asked transcending the concerns of a single system very little is actually known, and answers tend to be mostly in the nature of impressionistic beliefs and vague hypotheses. One such belief, frequently voiced, is that the rules of evidence under the common law adversary system of criminal procedure present much more formidable barriers to conviction than do corresponding rules in the non-adversary civil law system. This belief is then related to a more general feeling that the higher evidentiary barricades to conviction somehow emanate from the very nature of adversary proceedings and that their lowering smacks of...
Most apparent differences between US and continental law lose their relevance once one looks beneath...
Science has revealed that, contrary to longstanding intuitions, eyewitnesses are sometimes mistaken ...
Unlike in the US and Commonwealth jury systems, where judges give defined or undefined `beyond reaso...
Comparative research of criminal justice systems is still in its infancy. It is not surprising, then...
This article explores some of the differences between the common law and civilian legal systems with...
Evidentiary rules for criminal trials disallow various forms of probative evidence. Conventional wis...
There is an indissoluble connection between the evidence and the means of proof, since the evidence ...
This Article presents an evidentiary theory of substantive criminal law according to which sanctions...
In a recent issue of this Journal, Professor Abraham Goldstein and Research Fellow Martin Marcus dis...
Across diverse legal traditions, the search for truth is a basic function of the criminal process. U...
Illegal evidence term in the criminal proceedings arises many theoretical deliberations and disputes...
This paper uses the dichotomy between Herbert Packer’s (1968) two models of criminal justice advocac...
This paper analyzes the three components of the evidence operation: proof premises or evidence in th...
Good men everywhere praise the presumption of innocence. And be they Frenchmen, Germans, or American...
In common-law systems, the standard of proof for ordinary civil cases requires the party who bears t...
Most apparent differences between US and continental law lose their relevance once one looks beneath...
Science has revealed that, contrary to longstanding intuitions, eyewitnesses are sometimes mistaken ...
Unlike in the US and Commonwealth jury systems, where judges give defined or undefined `beyond reaso...
Comparative research of criminal justice systems is still in its infancy. It is not surprising, then...
This article explores some of the differences between the common law and civilian legal systems with...
Evidentiary rules for criminal trials disallow various forms of probative evidence. Conventional wis...
There is an indissoluble connection between the evidence and the means of proof, since the evidence ...
This Article presents an evidentiary theory of substantive criminal law according to which sanctions...
In a recent issue of this Journal, Professor Abraham Goldstein and Research Fellow Martin Marcus dis...
Across diverse legal traditions, the search for truth is a basic function of the criminal process. U...
Illegal evidence term in the criminal proceedings arises many theoretical deliberations and disputes...
This paper uses the dichotomy between Herbert Packer’s (1968) two models of criminal justice advocac...
This paper analyzes the three components of the evidence operation: proof premises or evidence in th...
Good men everywhere praise the presumption of innocence. And be they Frenchmen, Germans, or American...
In common-law systems, the standard of proof for ordinary civil cases requires the party who bears t...
Most apparent differences between US and continental law lose their relevance once one looks beneath...
Science has revealed that, contrary to longstanding intuitions, eyewitnesses are sometimes mistaken ...
Unlike in the US and Commonwealth jury systems, where judges give defined or undefined `beyond reaso...