This study was commissioned by the European Committee on Crime Problems at the Council of Europe to describe and discuss the standards used to asses the admissibility and appraisal of scientific evidence in various member countries. After documenting cases in which faulty forensic evidence seems to have played a critical role, the authors describe the legal foundations of the issues of admissibility and assessment of the probative value in the field of scientific evidence, contrasting criminal justice systems of accusatorial and inquisitorial tradition and the various risks that they pose in terms of equality of arms. Special attention is given to communication issues between lawyers and scientific experts. The authors eventually investigat...
This Article was prepared as a companion to the Fordham Law Review Reed Symposium on Forensic Expert...
Modern science forces the world to accept new theories and invention. Science has invented several t...
This paper draws on the article 'Forensic Science, Scientific Validity and Reliability: Advice from ...
This study was commissioned by the European Committee on Crime Problems at the Council of Europe to ...
Criminal justice authorities of EU countries currently engage in dialogue and action to build a comm...
In line with the growing EU interest in cross-border gathering and use of evidence in criminal matte...
There is an epistemic crisis in many areas of forensic science. This crisis emerged largely in respo...
In this paper we have conducted a general examination of the instruments governing the European inst...
The article focuses on the problematic issues of the European Union criminal justice, directly rela...
Ever since evidence has been crossing borders, law enforcement authorities have been searching for a...
In coming to a European Forensic Evidence Area, an European Union ambition to be reached by 2020, ju...
The issue of admissibility of evidence has been regulated only very scarcely in the EU. Judicial co...
The European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) does not mandate any particular format when forensic ...
The issue of international cooperation in criminal matters has interested legal theorists and practi...
Increasing use is being made of various types of scientific evidence in court. The general requirem...
This Article was prepared as a companion to the Fordham Law Review Reed Symposium on Forensic Expert...
Modern science forces the world to accept new theories and invention. Science has invented several t...
This paper draws on the article 'Forensic Science, Scientific Validity and Reliability: Advice from ...
This study was commissioned by the European Committee on Crime Problems at the Council of Europe to ...
Criminal justice authorities of EU countries currently engage in dialogue and action to build a comm...
In line with the growing EU interest in cross-border gathering and use of evidence in criminal matte...
There is an epistemic crisis in many areas of forensic science. This crisis emerged largely in respo...
In this paper we have conducted a general examination of the instruments governing the European inst...
The article focuses on the problematic issues of the European Union criminal justice, directly rela...
Ever since evidence has been crossing borders, law enforcement authorities have been searching for a...
In coming to a European Forensic Evidence Area, an European Union ambition to be reached by 2020, ju...
The issue of admissibility of evidence has been regulated only very scarcely in the EU. Judicial co...
The European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) does not mandate any particular format when forensic ...
The issue of international cooperation in criminal matters has interested legal theorists and practi...
Increasing use is being made of various types of scientific evidence in court. The general requirem...
This Article was prepared as a companion to the Fordham Law Review Reed Symposium on Forensic Expert...
Modern science forces the world to accept new theories and invention. Science has invented several t...
This paper draws on the article 'Forensic Science, Scientific Validity and Reliability: Advice from ...