Causal inference lies at the heart of many legal questions. Yet in the context of complicated disease litigation, in particular, the causal inquiry is beset with difficulties due to gaps in scientific knowledge concerning the precise biological processes underlying such diseases. Civil courts across the globe, faced with increased litigation on such matters, struggle to adhere to their judicial fact-finding and decision-making role in the face of such scientific uncertainty. An important difficulty in drawing evidentially sound causal inferences is the binary format of the traditional legal test for factual causation, being the but for test, which is based on the condicio-sine-qua-non principle. To the question would the damage have occurre...
One of the most important issues for science in the courtroom is the determination of causality. Lik...
Translating risk estimates derived from epidemiologic study into evidence of causality for a ...
In Sienkiewicz v Greif (UK) Limited, the Supreme Court discussed a doubles-the-risk test based on ep...
Causal inference lies at the heart of many legal questions. Yet in the context of complicated diseas...
A fundamental purpose of forensic medical, or medicolegal, analysis is to provide legal factfinders ...
The primary aim of forensic medical analysis is to provide legal factfinders with evidence regarding...
This paper takes it as a premise that a distinction between matters of fact and of law is important ...
This book undertakes an analysis of academic and judicial responses to the problem of evidential unc...
Judges and juries are increasingly being asked to settle questions about disease caused by hazardous...
This paper discusses different needs and approaches to establishing "causation" that are relevant in...
The emergence of facts of death in the case of a doctor’s negligence must obtain legal reasoning bas...
This paper reviews from a comparative legal perspective the range of juridical techniques that have ...
Investigating causation is a primary goal in forensic/legal medicine, aiming to establish the connec...
The approach adopted by epidemiologists when attributing a causal mechanism to an observed statistic...
One of the most important issues for science in the courtroom is the determination of causality. Lik...
Translating risk estimates derived from epidemiologic study into evidence of causality for a ...
In Sienkiewicz v Greif (UK) Limited, the Supreme Court discussed a doubles-the-risk test based on ep...
Causal inference lies at the heart of many legal questions. Yet in the context of complicated diseas...
A fundamental purpose of forensic medical, or medicolegal, analysis is to provide legal factfinders ...
The primary aim of forensic medical analysis is to provide legal factfinders with evidence regarding...
This paper takes it as a premise that a distinction between matters of fact and of law is important ...
This book undertakes an analysis of academic and judicial responses to the problem of evidential unc...
Judges and juries are increasingly being asked to settle questions about disease caused by hazardous...
This paper discusses different needs and approaches to establishing "causation" that are relevant in...
The emergence of facts of death in the case of a doctor’s negligence must obtain legal reasoning bas...
This paper reviews from a comparative legal perspective the range of juridical techniques that have ...
Investigating causation is a primary goal in forensic/legal medicine, aiming to establish the connec...
The approach adopted by epidemiologists when attributing a causal mechanism to an observed statistic...
One of the most important issues for science in the courtroom is the determination of causality. Lik...
Translating risk estimates derived from epidemiologic study into evidence of causality for a ...
In Sienkiewicz v Greif (UK) Limited, the Supreme Court discussed a doubles-the-risk test based on ep...