Through a series of judicial decisions and Practice Directions, the English courts have developed a rule that expert evidence must have ‘a sufficiently reliable scientific basis to be admitted’. There is a dearth of case-law as to what degree of reliability is ‘sufficient’. This article argues that the test should be interpreted as analogous to one developed in the law of hearsay: expert evidence (scientific or otherwise) must be ‘potentially safely reliable’ in the context of the evidence as a whole. The implications of this test will vary according to the relationship between the expert evidence and the other evidence in the case. The article identifies three main patterns into which this relationship falls. Whether the jury relies upon t...
This article explores the ways in which experts can assist the jury to assess the credibility of oth...
A recent report of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology questioned the vali...
Expert testimony is offered at the vast majority of trials in courts of general jurisdiction in the ...
Through a series of judicial decisions and Practice Directions, the English courts have developed a ...
An amendment to the Criminal Practice Direction issued by the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wale...
In recent decades, forensic science evidence has come to play an increasingly significant role in cr...
This paper draws on the article 'Forensic Science, Scientific Validity and Reliability: Advice from ...
The work of forensic scientists, by providing specialist assistance beyond the normal experience or...
Evaluates whether Young (Thomas Ross) v HM Advocate (HCJ), which set out a five-stage test of "suffi...
The apparent link between miscarriages of justice in prosecutions involving expert evidence and the ...
In the context of the UK Supreme Court decision in Sienkiewicz v Greif (2011) this article discusses...
One of the most persistent questions in criminal evidence relates to the use of (unchallenged) exper...
Evidence law regimes across several contemporary legal orders provide a host of doctrinal devices de...
Modern law on expert testimony insists, as a condition of admissibility, that the asserted expertise...
Tribunals have come to depend increasingly on expertise for determining the facts in cases. However,...
This article explores the ways in which experts can assist the jury to assess the credibility of oth...
A recent report of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology questioned the vali...
Expert testimony is offered at the vast majority of trials in courts of general jurisdiction in the ...
Through a series of judicial decisions and Practice Directions, the English courts have developed a ...
An amendment to the Criminal Practice Direction issued by the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wale...
In recent decades, forensic science evidence has come to play an increasingly significant role in cr...
This paper draws on the article 'Forensic Science, Scientific Validity and Reliability: Advice from ...
The work of forensic scientists, by providing specialist assistance beyond the normal experience or...
Evaluates whether Young (Thomas Ross) v HM Advocate (HCJ), which set out a five-stage test of "suffi...
The apparent link between miscarriages of justice in prosecutions involving expert evidence and the ...
In the context of the UK Supreme Court decision in Sienkiewicz v Greif (2011) this article discusses...
One of the most persistent questions in criminal evidence relates to the use of (unchallenged) exper...
Evidence law regimes across several contemporary legal orders provide a host of doctrinal devices de...
Modern law on expert testimony insists, as a condition of admissibility, that the asserted expertise...
Tribunals have come to depend increasingly on expertise for determining the facts in cases. However,...
This article explores the ways in which experts can assist the jury to assess the credibility of oth...
A recent report of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology questioned the vali...
Expert testimony is offered at the vast majority of trials in courts of general jurisdiction in the ...