Current writing on evidence tampering --inclusive of the destruction, fabrication, and suppression of evidence--creates the impression that our system of litigation is in a state of fundamental disrepair. This Article suggests that this perception may merely reflect defects in the conventional view of trial\u27s purpose. The conventional view sees trial as a stand-alone device for uncovering microhistorical truths about what has already come to pass. In contrast, this Article advocates viewing trial as but one component of the overall mechanism by which the legal system influences everyday behavior. When trial is viewed less in terms of discerning past events, and more in terms of shaping future events, several apparently troublesome aspec...
This Article examines a disturbing trend in civil litigation: the demise of the jury’s historic prer...
pproximately twenty-five years ago, Professor Richard Lempert, reflecting on the then-current state ...
article published in law reviewThe use of evidentiary rules to achieve substantive goals strikes me ...
For at least two centuries, Anglo-American courts have responded to a party\u27s evidence tampering ...
This article criticises H.L. Ho’s argument that the exclusion of improperly obtained evidence can be...
At the core of every lawsuit is a mix of information-revealing documents that chronicle a party\u27s...
Current writing on evidence tampering --inclusive of the destruction, fabrication, and suppression ...
Since the 1930s, the proportion of civil cases concluded at trial has declined from about 20% to bel...
This Essay posits that certain structural dynamics, which dominate criminal proceedings, significant...
This Article critically evaluates the relationship between constructing narratives and achieving fac...
This Article proposes that courts should refrain from imposing adverse inference jury instructions a...
The effective performance by courts of their adjudicative role depends on the availability of releva...
It has been an obsession of modern civil procedure to design ways to reveal more before trial about ...
This article confirms the existence of these legal process-centric themes and considers some potenti...
This article describes the myriad ways in which misconduct by jurors can contaminate a trial and ver...
This Article examines a disturbing trend in civil litigation: the demise of the jury’s historic prer...
pproximately twenty-five years ago, Professor Richard Lempert, reflecting on the then-current state ...
article published in law reviewThe use of evidentiary rules to achieve substantive goals strikes me ...
For at least two centuries, Anglo-American courts have responded to a party\u27s evidence tampering ...
This article criticises H.L. Ho’s argument that the exclusion of improperly obtained evidence can be...
At the core of every lawsuit is a mix of information-revealing documents that chronicle a party\u27s...
Current writing on evidence tampering --inclusive of the destruction, fabrication, and suppression ...
Since the 1930s, the proportion of civil cases concluded at trial has declined from about 20% to bel...
This Essay posits that certain structural dynamics, which dominate criminal proceedings, significant...
This Article critically evaluates the relationship between constructing narratives and achieving fac...
This Article proposes that courts should refrain from imposing adverse inference jury instructions a...
The effective performance by courts of their adjudicative role depends on the availability of releva...
It has been an obsession of modern civil procedure to design ways to reveal more before trial about ...
This article confirms the existence of these legal process-centric themes and considers some potenti...
This article describes the myriad ways in which misconduct by jurors can contaminate a trial and ver...
This Article examines a disturbing trend in civil litigation: the demise of the jury’s historic prer...
pproximately twenty-five years ago, Professor Richard Lempert, reflecting on the then-current state ...
article published in law reviewThe use of evidentiary rules to achieve substantive goals strikes me ...