American criminal law has a deep commitment to the presumption of innocence. Yet at the same time, American criminal justice is, by international standards, extraordinarily harsh. This Article addresses this troubling state of affairs. The Article contrasts the American approach with the approach of the inquisitorial tradition of continental Europe
There has recently been a proliferation of case law dealing with potential inroads into the presumpt...
This book provides a comprehensive analysis of the presumption of innocence from both a practical an...
Many international instruments proclaim that those who face criminal prosecution ought to be afforde...
American criminal law has a deep commitment to the presumption of innocence. Yet at the same time, A...
James Q. Whitman, in his deeply comparative new article, describes the American criminal justice sys...
Good men everywhere praise the presumption of innocence. And be they Frenchmen, Germans, or American...
International audienceProdefendant rules in criminal procedure, such as the presumption of innocence...
The presumption of innocence is an ancient human right and is included in international criminal law...
In a recent issue of this Journal, Professor Abraham Goldstein and Research Fellow Martin Marcus dis...
Presumption of innocence appears as a rule hardly in modern penal trial. For first timewas noted in ...
This book documents the increasing rate at which the presumption of innocence is being abrogated in ...
The presumption of innocence is widely considered important, included in most human rights agreement...
In these essays, the authors explore different views of the criminal trial as a means of determining...
The presumption of innocence is unanimously considered a fundamental requirement for criminal justic...
James Q. Whitman, Harsh Justice: Criminal Punishment and the Widening Divide between America and Eur...
There has recently been a proliferation of case law dealing with potential inroads into the presumpt...
This book provides a comprehensive analysis of the presumption of innocence from both a practical an...
Many international instruments proclaim that those who face criminal prosecution ought to be afforde...
American criminal law has a deep commitment to the presumption of innocence. Yet at the same time, A...
James Q. Whitman, in his deeply comparative new article, describes the American criminal justice sys...
Good men everywhere praise the presumption of innocence. And be they Frenchmen, Germans, or American...
International audienceProdefendant rules in criminal procedure, such as the presumption of innocence...
The presumption of innocence is an ancient human right and is included in international criminal law...
In a recent issue of this Journal, Professor Abraham Goldstein and Research Fellow Martin Marcus dis...
Presumption of innocence appears as a rule hardly in modern penal trial. For first timewas noted in ...
This book documents the increasing rate at which the presumption of innocence is being abrogated in ...
The presumption of innocence is widely considered important, included in most human rights agreement...
In these essays, the authors explore different views of the criminal trial as a means of determining...
The presumption of innocence is unanimously considered a fundamental requirement for criminal justic...
James Q. Whitman, Harsh Justice: Criminal Punishment and the Widening Divide between America and Eur...
There has recently been a proliferation of case law dealing with potential inroads into the presumpt...
This book provides a comprehensive analysis of the presumption of innocence from both a practical an...
Many international instruments proclaim that those who face criminal prosecution ought to be afforde...