As a result of recent scandals concerning evidence and proof in the administration of criminal justice - ranging from innocent people on death row in the United States to misuse of statistics leading to wrongful convictions in The Netherlands and elsewhere - inquiries into the logic of evidence and
The Philosophy of Legal Proof
β Scribed by Lewis Ross
- Publisher
- Cambridge University Press
- Year
- 2024
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 82
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Title page
Copyright page
The Philosophy of Legal Proof
Contents
Introduction
1 Standards of Proof
1.1 The Criminal Standard
1.1.1 The Actus Reus and Mens Rea
1.2 The Civil Standard
1.3 Justifying the Standards
1.4 Two Types of Mistake
1.5 Blackstoneβs Asymmetry
1.6 Consequences-Based Arguments against Beyond Reasonable
Doubt
1.7 Defending Beyond Reasonable Doubt?
1.8 Criminal Proof and Community Belief
1.9 Back to Civil Proof
2 Proof: Fixed or Flexible?
2.1 Different Standards for Different Crimes?
2.2 Another Perspective on Flexible Proof
2.3 Radically Flexible Standards?
3 Should Proof Be Binary?
3.1 Binary versus Non-Binary Systems
3.2 Motivating Non-Binary Systems
3.3 Worries about Non-Binary Systems
3.4 Radical Departures from the Binary
4 Legal Probabilism and Anti-Probabilism
4.1 Probabilism and Anti-Probabilism
4.2 The Proof Paradox
4.2.1 Civil Law
4.2.2 Criminal Law
4.2.3 Discussion
4.3 Epistemic Responses to the Proof Paradox
4.4 DNA Evidence
4.5 Moral and Political Diagnoses
4.6 The Cost of Denying Statistics
4.7 Statistics in Criminal Law Reconsidered
5 Who Should Decide?
5.1 Reliability versus MoralβPolitical Value
5.2 Questions of Law versus Questions of Fact
5.3 The Democratic Jury?
5.4 Jury Nullification
5.5 Bias, Rape, and βJury Scienceβ
References
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