Evidence is the lifeblood of a trial in the common law world and the admissibility of evidence in criminal trials is, in particular, an area of immense tension and import. This thesis endeavours to shine a light upon a selection of rulings made in criminal trials on indictment in Ireland by a variety of trial judges from the Circuit Criminal Court, the Central Criminal Court and the Special Criminal Court. These rulings are analysed within the context of how discretion is used by the trial judge. The field-work undertaken involved interviewing some of the participants involved, including practitioners and trial judges. The following also assesses whether the appellate courts in Ireland can be relied upon to curb the more egregious e...
Copyright © 2013 James B. Jacobs. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Comm...
This article considers the controversial issue of the admission of sexual experience evidence in sex...
This commentary updates the paper ‘Excluding evidence (or staying proceedings) to vindicate rights i...
Evidence is the lifeblood of a trial in the common law world and the admissibility of evidence in c...
Ireland as a common law jurisdiction operates an adversarial system. Ireland has a written Constitut...
Police procedures and practices in the investigation of crime are shaped by many things. One particu...
Introduction: The law on the admissibility of improperly obtained evidence in Ireland was first auth...
The divers, and diverse, opinions of the English judiciary over the last quarter of a century as to ...
This thesis provides a comprehensive overview of the presumption of innocence in Irish law. It argue...
In the arena of improperly obtained evidence the Irish courts have, for some time, operated one of t...
This thesis interrogates the construction of fairness to the accused in historic child sexual abuse ...
Adopting the interpretative/hermeneutical method typical of much legal scholarship, this article con...
The constitutional status of the right to trial by jury is reflected in its recognition as a fundame...
The constitutional duty of the Irish state ‘to defend and vindicate the personal rights of the citiz...
peer-reviewedThis article considers the controversial issue of the admission of sexual experience ev...
Copyright © 2013 James B. Jacobs. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Comm...
This article considers the controversial issue of the admission of sexual experience evidence in sex...
This commentary updates the paper ‘Excluding evidence (or staying proceedings) to vindicate rights i...
Evidence is the lifeblood of a trial in the common law world and the admissibility of evidence in c...
Ireland as a common law jurisdiction operates an adversarial system. Ireland has a written Constitut...
Police procedures and practices in the investigation of crime are shaped by many things. One particu...
Introduction: The law on the admissibility of improperly obtained evidence in Ireland was first auth...
The divers, and diverse, opinions of the English judiciary over the last quarter of a century as to ...
This thesis provides a comprehensive overview of the presumption of innocence in Irish law. It argue...
In the arena of improperly obtained evidence the Irish courts have, for some time, operated one of t...
This thesis interrogates the construction of fairness to the accused in historic child sexual abuse ...
Adopting the interpretative/hermeneutical method typical of much legal scholarship, this article con...
The constitutional status of the right to trial by jury is reflected in its recognition as a fundame...
The constitutional duty of the Irish state ‘to defend and vindicate the personal rights of the citiz...
peer-reviewedThis article considers the controversial issue of the admission of sexual experience ev...
Copyright © 2013 James B. Jacobs. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Comm...
This article considers the controversial issue of the admission of sexual experience evidence in sex...
This commentary updates the paper ‘Excluding evidence (or staying proceedings) to vindicate rights i...