This article provides an explanation of the duties and responsibilities owed by forensic practitioners (and other expert witnesses) when preparing for and presenting evidence in criminal proceedings. It is written in the shadow of reports by the National Academy of Sciences (US), the National Institute of Standards and Technology (US), the Scottish Fingerprint Inquiry and a recent publication entitled 'How to cross-examine forensic scientists: a guide for Lawyers'. The article examines potential responses to questions focused on the need for scientific research, validation, uncertainties, limitations and error, contextual bias and the way expert opinions are expressed in reports and oral testimony. Responses and the discussion is developed ...
This article explains why the adversarial trial has not been an effective mechanism for regulating t...
The ability to confront witnesses through cross-examination is conventionally understood as the most...
Abstract For more than 10 years, forensic science has been at best, criticized for its lack of scien...
This article provides an explanation of the duties and responsibilities owed by forensic practitione...
Forensic science must satisfy two needs; that of the scientific community and that of the legal prof...
Forensic scientists’ expert opinions are used increasingly in the course of police investigations, o...
In recent decades, forensic science evidence has come to play an increasingly significant role in cr...
In this article we review an important report produced by the US President’s Council of Advisors on ...
The use of an array of scientific techniques and technologies is now considered customary within cri...
There is an epistemic crisis in many areas of forensic science. This crisis emerged largely in respo...
The utilization of an array of scientific techniques and technologies is now considered customary wi...
Modern science forces the world to accept new theories and invention. Science has invented several t...
This paper draws on the article 'Forensic Science, Scientific Validity and Reliability: Advice from ...
This Article was prepared as a companion to the Fordham Law Review Reed Symposium on Forensic Expert...
Legal educators increasingly use the classroom to import expertise from scientists and social scient...
This article explains why the adversarial trial has not been an effective mechanism for regulating t...
The ability to confront witnesses through cross-examination is conventionally understood as the most...
Abstract For more than 10 years, forensic science has been at best, criticized for its lack of scien...
This article provides an explanation of the duties and responsibilities owed by forensic practitione...
Forensic science must satisfy two needs; that of the scientific community and that of the legal prof...
Forensic scientists’ expert opinions are used increasingly in the course of police investigations, o...
In recent decades, forensic science evidence has come to play an increasingly significant role in cr...
In this article we review an important report produced by the US President’s Council of Advisors on ...
The use of an array of scientific techniques and technologies is now considered customary within cri...
There is an epistemic crisis in many areas of forensic science. This crisis emerged largely in respo...
The utilization of an array of scientific techniques and technologies is now considered customary wi...
Modern science forces the world to accept new theories and invention. Science has invented several t...
This paper draws on the article 'Forensic Science, Scientific Validity and Reliability: Advice from ...
This Article was prepared as a companion to the Fordham Law Review Reed Symposium on Forensic Expert...
Legal educators increasingly use the classroom to import expertise from scientists and social scient...
This article explains why the adversarial trial has not been an effective mechanism for regulating t...
The ability to confront witnesses through cross-examination is conventionally understood as the most...
Abstract For more than 10 years, forensic science has been at best, criticized for its lack of scien...