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LEADER 08002cam a2201645 a 4500
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991001903899707546
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20220623073854.0
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101011r20122010enka b 001 0 eng
020
a| 9780199231645 (pbk.)
020
a| 0199231648 (pbk.)
035
a| (HKSYU)b1495591x-852hksyu_inst
040
a| UKM
c| UKM
d| YDXCP
d| BWX
d| CDX
d| HUA
d| NhCcYME
d| HK-SYU
042
a| ukblcatcopy
050
4
a| KD8371
082
0
4
a| 345.4206
2| 22
090
a| KD8371
b| .R63 2010
092
0
s| L
a| 345.4206
b| ROB 2010
100
1
a| Roberts, Paul,
d| 1968-
245
1
0
a| Criminal evidence /
c| Paul Roberts, Adrian Zuckerman.
250
a| 2nd ed.
260
a| Oxford :
b| Oxford University Press,
c| c2010.
300
a| xxxvii, 729 p. :
b| ill. ;
c| 25 cm.
500
a| Previous ed.: 2004.
504
a| Includes bibliographical references and index.
650
0
a| Evidence, Criminal
z| England.
650
0
a| Evidence, Criminal
z| Wales.
700
1
a| Zuckerman, A. A. S.
907
a| b1495591x
b| 13-05-20
c| 18-09-14
910
a| wpc
b| df
935
a| (HK-SYU)500848623
9| ExL
970
0
1
t| Table of Legislation
p| xv
970
0
1
t| Table of Cases
p| xxi
970
1
1
l| 1.
t| Princeiples of Criminal Evidence
p| 1
970
1
1
l| 1.1.
t| An Invitation to Criminal Evidence
p| 1
970
1
1
l| 1.2.
t| Criminal Procedure and Retributive Justice
p| 9
970
1
1
l| 1.3.
t| Five Foundational Principles of Criminal Evidence
p| 18
970
1
1
l| 1.4.
t| Principles, Rules, and Discretion
p| 25
970
1
1
l| 1.5.
t| Sources of Criminal Evidence
p| 30
970
1
1
l| 1.6.
t| Understanding Criminal Evidence
p| 38
970
1
1
l| 2.
t| The Procedural Framework Of Adversarial Jury Trial
p| 42
970
1
1
l| 2.1.
t| Criminal Evidence in Procedural Context
p| 42
970
1
1
l| 2.2.
t| Adversarial Traditions
p| 46
970
1
1
l| 2.3.
t| Adversarial Trial Procedure in England and Wales
p| 52
970
1
1
l| 2.4.
t| Scope and Function of the Common Law Jury
p| 65
970
1
1
l| 2.5.
t| Trial by Judge and Jury in England and Wales
p| 72
970
1
1
l| 2.6.
t| The Institutional Context of Criminal Evidence
p| 93
970
1
1
l| 3.
t| Admissible Evidence
p| 96
970
1
1
l| 3.1.
t| The Legal Framework of Admissibility
p| 96
970
1
1
l| 3.2.
t| Relevance
p| 99
970
1
1
l| 3.3.
t| Typologies of Evidence
p| 109
970
1
1
l| 3.4.
t| Sources of Information in Criminal Litigation
p| 114
970
1
1
l| 3.5.
t| Conceptions of Evidence and Principles of Justice
p| 125
970
1
1
l| 4.
t| Fact-Finding and Proof
p| 127
970
1
1
l| 4.1.
t| Taking Facts Seriously
p| 127
970
1
1
l| 4.2.
t| Finding Facts
p| 129
970
1
1
l| 4.3.
t| A Matter of Opinion?
p| 139
970
1
1
l| 4.4.
t| Common Sense Fact-Finding
p| 142
970
1
1
l| 4.5.
t| Probability and Statistics
p| 148
970
1
1
l| 4.6.
t| Just Inferences?
p| 163
970
1
1
l| 4.7.
t| Judicial Notice
p| 169
970
1
1
l| 5.
t| Fair Trial
p| 176
970
1
1
l| 5.1.
t| Sources of Procedural Fairness
p| 176
970
1
1
l| 5.2.
t| The Pre-history of Section 78
p| 176
970
1
1
l| 5.3.
t| Rationales for Exclusion
p| 179
970
1
1
l| 5.4.
t| The Jurisprudence of Section 78
p| 191
970
1
1
l| 5.5.
t| Entrapment
p| 205
970
1
1
l| 5.6.
t| Fair Trial as Constitutional Principle and the Destiny of Section 78
p| 216
970
1
1
l| 6.
t| Burdens of Proof and the Presumption of Innocence
p| 220
970
1
1
l| 6.1.
t| Burdens and Presumptions
p| 220
970
1
1
l| 6.2.
t| Procedural Techniques of Risk- Allocation
p| 224
970
1
1
l| 6.3.
t| Philosophical Foundations of the Presumption of Innocence - the Political Morality of Woolmington
p| 240
970
1
1
l| 6.4.
t| Proof Beyond Reasonable Doubt in Theory and Practice
p| 253
970
1
1
l| 6.5.
t| Reversing the Onus of Proof - Before and After the Human Rights Act
p| 265
970
1
1
l| 6.6.
t| Woolmingtons Legacy and the Limits of the Presumption of Innocence
p| 282
970
1
1
l| 7.
t| Witness Testimony and the Principle Of orality
p| 291
970
1
1
l| 7.1.
t| The Oral Tradition and its Modern Discontents
p| 291
970
1
1
l| 7.2.
t| Testimonial Competence
p| 301
970
1
1
l| 7.3.
t| Compellability - the Principle of Compulsory Process
p| 306
970
1
1
l| 7.4.
t| Testimonial Privileges
p| 309
970
1
1
l| 7.5.
t| Public Interest Immunity
p| 320
970
1
1
l| 8.
t| Criminal troal Procedure - Examination-in-chief and cross-examinatin
p| 331
970
1
1
l| 8.1.
t| The Procedural Course of the Trial
p| 331
970
1
1
l| 8.2.
t| Procedural Regulation of Examination-in-Chief
p| 333
970
1
1
l| 8.3.
t| The Rule against Narrative
p| 340
970
1
1
l| 8.4.
t| Cross-examination and Witness Credibility
p| 346
970
1
1
l| 8.5.
t| Collateral-finality
p| 351
970
1
1
l| 8.6.
t| The Incredible Vanishing Credit-Issue Distinction
p| 358
970
1
1
l| 9.
t| Hearsay
p| 364
970
1
1
l| 9.1.
t| Introduction
p| 364
970
1
1
l| 9.2.
t| Exclusionary Rationales: What's Wrong with Hearsay?
p| 365
970
1
1
l| 9.3.
t| Structure of the CJA 2003's Hearsay Provisions
p| 379
970
1
1
l| 9.4.
t| Definition and Scope of the Rule Against Hearsay
p| 384
970
1
1
l| 9.5.
t| Statutory Exceptions to the Rule Against Hearsay
p| 397
970
1
1
l| 9.6.
t| Common Law Exceptions Preserved by Section 118 of the CJA 2003
p| 415
970
1
1
l| 9.7.
t| Back to the Future: Reconstructing a Principled Law of Hearsay
p| 432
970
1
1
l| 10.
t| Vulnerable Witnesses and the Principle of Orality
p| 442
970
1
1
l| 10.1.
t| Identifying Testimonial Vulnerability
p| 442
970
1
1
l| 10.2.
t| Previous Sexual History Evidence
p| 443
970
1
1
l| 10.3.
t| Children's Evidence
p| 453
970
1
1
l| 10.4.
t| Special Measures for Vulnerable or Intimidated Witnesses
p| 456
970
1
1
l| 10.5.
t| The Demise of Orality?
p| 465
970
1
1
l| 11.
t| Expert Evidence
p| 469
970
1
1
l| 11.1.
t| The Significance of Expert Evidence
p| 469
970
1
1
l| 11.2.
t| Beyond Expert Òpinion': Education or Deference?
p| 471
970
1
1
l| 11.3.
t| Qualified Expertise and the Problem of Bias
p| 475
970
1
1
l| 11.4.
t| Rules of Admissibility
p| 482
970
1
1
l| 11.5.
t| Novel Science and ̀Field of Expertise'
p| 493
970
1
1
l| 11.6.
t| The Future of Expert Evidence
p| 502
970
1
1
l| 12.
t| Confessions
p| 510
970
1
1
l| 12.1.
t| Self-incriminating Evidence
p| 510
970
1
1
l| 12.2.
t| The Law and Practice of Custodial Interrogation
p| 512
970
1
1
l| 12.3.
t| Evidentiary Regulation: the Admissibility of Confessions
p| 522
970
1
1
l| 12.4.
t| Vulnerable Suspects
p| 533
970
1
1
l| 12.5.
t| Confessions of Co-accused
p| 535
970
1
1
l| 13.
t| The Accused's; Rivilege Against Self-Incrimination
p| 538
970
1
1
l| 13.1.
t| Introduction: English Common Law's Privilege
p| 538
970
1
1
l| 13.2.
t| Rationales Re-examined
p| 547
970
1
1
l| 13.3.
t| Theory Into Practice: Legislative Transformations of the Privilege Against Self-Incrimination
p| 563
970
1
1
l| 13.4.
t| Conclusions
p| 577
970
1
1
l| 14.
t| The Accuseds Character and Extranceus Misconduct
p| 581
970
1
1
l| 14.1.
t| Introduction - a Reformed Character?
p| 581
970
1
1
l| 14.2.
t| Character, Proof, and Prejudice
p| 586
970
1
1
l| 14.3.
t| Scope and Structure of the CJA 2003's Bad Character Provisions
p| 600
970
1
1
l| 14.4.
t| The Four Prosecution Gateways
p| 621
970
1
1
l| 14.5.
t| Bad Character in Issue Between Accused and Co-Accused
p| 651
970
1
1
l| 14.6.
t| The Character of Criminal Evidence
p| 658
970
1
1
l| 15.
t| Corroboration and Forensic Reasoning Rules
p| 662
970
1
1
l| 15.1.
t| The Meaning of Corroboration
p| 662
970
1
1
l| 15.2.
t| Corroboration and Warnings
p| 667
970
1
1
l| 15.3.
t| Forensic Reasoning Rules
p| 676
970
1
1
l| 15.4.
t| Eyewitness Identification Evidence
p| 684
970
1
1
l| 15.5.
t| Corroboration and Fair Trials
p| 690
970
1
1
l| 16.
t| Criminal Evidence - Retrospective and Prospects
p| 694
970
1
1
l| 16.1.
t| Method and Context
p| 694
970
1
1
l| 16.2.
t| Principles of Criminal Evidence
p| 696
970
1
1
l| 16.3.
t| Current Trends
p| 699
970
1
1
l| 16.4.
t| Future Directions for Criminal Evidence
p| 707
970
0
1
t| Index
p| 709
998
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