This article discusses the role of social science in legal proceedings with special attention to the ethical situation of the expert psychologist asked to testify about the reliability of an eyewitness identification. It argues that in this area as in others one cannot discuss the ethics of expert psychological testimony without attending to the quality of the research and theory on which the testimony is based. It also identifies as considerations that bear on the propriety of such testimony the information the fact finder is likely to receive in its absence and the factual guilt of the defendant. The paper goes on to discuss the relationship between law and social science more generally. It argues that ultimately courts do and should have...
Increasingly, psychologists are giving expert testimony in court on the accu racy of eyewitness ide...
This article intends to foster an fruitful interaction of social theory and interpretation of the la...
Once confined to academic journals and considered irrelevant to American law, the empirical findings...
This article discusses the role of social science in legal proceedings with special attention to the...
This article is a state-by-state and circuit-by-circuit analysis of judicial decisions on the admiss...
Eyewitness identifications are important to jurors, especially in criminal trials. Psychological res...
Eyewitness identifications are important to jurors, especially in criminal trials. Psychological res...
Eyewitness identifications are important to jurors, especially in criminal trials. Psychological res...
Throughout the late 1960s and early 1970s, the Supreme Court defined the Due Process limitations on ...
The piece briefly traces the history of the use of social science in the courtroom, and proceeds to ...
Throughout the late 1960s and early 1970s, the Supreme Court defined the Due Process limitations on ...
The piece briefly traces the history of the use of social science in the courtroom, and proceeds to ...
Social scientists have increasingly become involved in the submission of amicus curiae or friend of...
Social scientists have increasingly become involved in the submission of amicus curiae or friend of...
Eyewitness identifications are important to jurors, especially in criminal trials. Psychological res...
Increasingly, psychologists are giving expert testimony in court on the accu racy of eyewitness ide...
This article intends to foster an fruitful interaction of social theory and interpretation of the la...
Once confined to academic journals and considered irrelevant to American law, the empirical findings...
This article discusses the role of social science in legal proceedings with special attention to the...
This article is a state-by-state and circuit-by-circuit analysis of judicial decisions on the admiss...
Eyewitness identifications are important to jurors, especially in criminal trials. Psychological res...
Eyewitness identifications are important to jurors, especially in criminal trials. Psychological res...
Eyewitness identifications are important to jurors, especially in criminal trials. Psychological res...
Throughout the late 1960s and early 1970s, the Supreme Court defined the Due Process limitations on ...
The piece briefly traces the history of the use of social science in the courtroom, and proceeds to ...
Throughout the late 1960s and early 1970s, the Supreme Court defined the Due Process limitations on ...
The piece briefly traces the history of the use of social science in the courtroom, and proceeds to ...
Social scientists have increasingly become involved in the submission of amicus curiae or friend of...
Social scientists have increasingly become involved in the submission of amicus curiae or friend of...
Eyewitness identifications are important to jurors, especially in criminal trials. Psychological res...
Increasingly, psychologists are giving expert testimony in court on the accu racy of eyewitness ide...
This article intends to foster an fruitful interaction of social theory and interpretation of the la...
Once confined to academic journals and considered irrelevant to American law, the empirical findings...