This Article develops an analytical framework to investigate novel ways in which legal reforms disguised as “substantive” can affect procedural due process safeguards differently among racial groups. Scholars have long recognized the impact evidence rules have on substantive policies, such as modifying primary incentives or affecting the distribution of legal entitlements in society. However, legal scholars have not paid enough attention to the reverse effect: how changes in “substantive law” influence policy objectives traditionally associated with evidence law—“evidentiary policies.” To fill this gap, this Article discusses three related evidentiary policies. The first is accuracy, which courts and scholars consider a central objective of...
Implicit bias research indicates that despite our expressly endorsed values, Americans share a perva...
The United States Supreme Court held its 1970 decision In re Winship that in criminal prosecutions t...
Discoveries of wrongful convictions have increased substantially over the last several decades. Duri...
This Article develops an analytical framework to investigate novel ways in which legal reforms disgu...
This Article develops an analytical framework to investigate novel ways in which legal reforms disgu...
In this Essay, we analyze how evidentiary concerns dominate actors’ behavior. Our findings offer an ...
This Article provides two principal contributions to the study of wrongful convictions. First, it fi...
This Article analyzes the interaction between the burden of proof and evidentiary discovery rules. B...
Chapter 1 examines the effects of state-level workers’ compensation reforms on workers’ access to co...
This Article identifies the causes and consequences of a puzzling asymmetry in constitutional law. O...
If the national policy of eliminating discrimination is to be achieved, the courts--to whom the majo...
Evidentiary presumptions in law act as shortcuts to rigorous proof. By means of an evidentiary presu...
This Article presents an evidentiary theory of substantive criminal law according to which sanctions...
Scholars, judges, and lawyers have long believed that evidence rules apply equally to all persons re...
Federal Rule of Evidence 609, Impeachment by Evidence of a Criminal Conviction, allows the litigatin...
Implicit bias research indicates that despite our expressly endorsed values, Americans share a perva...
The United States Supreme Court held its 1970 decision In re Winship that in criminal prosecutions t...
Discoveries of wrongful convictions have increased substantially over the last several decades. Duri...
This Article develops an analytical framework to investigate novel ways in which legal reforms disgu...
This Article develops an analytical framework to investigate novel ways in which legal reforms disgu...
In this Essay, we analyze how evidentiary concerns dominate actors’ behavior. Our findings offer an ...
This Article provides two principal contributions to the study of wrongful convictions. First, it fi...
This Article analyzes the interaction between the burden of proof and evidentiary discovery rules. B...
Chapter 1 examines the effects of state-level workers’ compensation reforms on workers’ access to co...
This Article identifies the causes and consequences of a puzzling asymmetry in constitutional law. O...
If the national policy of eliminating discrimination is to be achieved, the courts--to whom the majo...
Evidentiary presumptions in law act as shortcuts to rigorous proof. By means of an evidentiary presu...
This Article presents an evidentiary theory of substantive criminal law according to which sanctions...
Scholars, judges, and lawyers have long believed that evidence rules apply equally to all persons re...
Federal Rule of Evidence 609, Impeachment by Evidence of a Criminal Conviction, allows the litigatin...
Implicit bias research indicates that despite our expressly endorsed values, Americans share a perva...
The United States Supreme Court held its 1970 decision In re Winship that in criminal prosecutions t...
Discoveries of wrongful convictions have increased substantially over the last several decades. Duri...