Expert evidence : law, practice, procedure and advocacy / Ian Freckelton QC.
2019
KU3656 .F742 2019 (Map It)
Available at Cellar
Formats
Format | |
---|---|
BibTeX | |
MARCXML | |
TextMARC | |
MARC | |
DublinCore | |
EndNote | |
NLM | |
RefWorks | |
RIS |
Items
Details
Author
Title
Expert evidence : law, practice, procedure and advocacy / Ian Freckelton QC.
Published
Pyrmont, N.S.W. : Thomson Reuters, 2019.
Call Number
KU3656 .F742 2019
Edition
Sixth edition.
ISBN
9780455238425 (paperback)
0455238421 (paperback)
9780455238432 (e-book)
0455238421 (paperback)
9780455238432 (e-book)
Description
xcvii, 1,409 pages ; 24 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)1121212135
Summary
"This book is the acclaimed work of first resort for analysing the complex law and practice surrounding expert witnesses and expert evidence in personal injury, commercial, criminal and family law litigation. It has been cited for over two decades by superior courts in every jurisdiction in Australia and New Zealand, as well as in a number of other countries. The sixth edition consolidates Expert Evidence as the leading international work on its subject, with additional treatment of the law in common law jurisdictions. It analyses the common law and statutory criteria for expert evidence admissibility and provides advocacy guidance in relation to how best expert witnesses can be assisted to provide their opinions to courts and be made accountable for them. It discusses the optimal ways for concurrent evidence (hot-tubbing) and experts' meetings prior to court hearings (expert conclaves) to be managed. It reviews decisions in relation to the disciplinary and civil liability of expert witnesses, and the potential for wasted costs orders to be made against experts, as well as the lawyers who commission them. It analyses the role of assessors, referees and court-appointed experts, as well as the forensic consequences of courts' codes of conduct for experts, including when breaches of such codes may have to adverse consequences. It also reviews trends in appellate case law in relation to trial judges' decisions to admit and decline to admit expert opinions. This book also deals with a range of areas of specialist knowledge where admissibility and reliability issues have been confronted in relation to expert opinions, including in relation to novel medical and scientific evidence, as well as counter-intuitive opinions from mental health professionals. Chapters are devoted to accounting, engineering, statistical, anthropological, survey, and planning evidence, as well as in relation to expert evidence about foreign law. Reflecting the law as at 1 July 2019, the Sixth Edition incorporates new material in relation to: (1) evidence by forensic engineers and architects; (2) interpretation of admissibility thresholds under both statutory and common law; (3) appellate decisions on DNA profiling and novel scientific evidence; (4) expert evidence about foreign law; (5) ad hoc expert evidence given by police witnesses; (6) the role of referees and concurrent evidence, consecutive expert evidence and the use of expert conclaves; (7) empirical material in advocacy chapters; and (8) costs orders against experts and legal practitioners. This updates international case law in relation to expert evidence and reviews options for appellate action to be taken in relation to admissibility determinations concerning expert opinion evidence."
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Other Editions
Revision of: Freckelton, Ian R. Expert evidence : law, practice, procedure and advocacy. 4th ed. Sydney : Lawbook Co., 2009. 9780455225470. (DLC) 2009510371.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Pt. 1. Introduction
pt. 2. Common law evidentiary rules
pt. 3. Statutory evidentiary rules
pt. 4. Appeals
pt. 5. Procedure
pt. 6. Expert witnesses and decision making
pt. 7. Expert evidence in court
pt. 8. Liability of experts
pt. 9. Medical, dental and nursing evidence
pt. 10. Mental health evidence
pt. 11. Social scientists' evidence
pt. 12. Scientists' evidence
pt. 13. Police evidence
pt. 14. Accident reconstruction evidence
pt. 15. Foreign law evidence
pt. 16. Financial evidence
pt. 17. Construction evidence
pt. 18. Intellectual property evidence.
pt. 2. Common law evidentiary rules
pt. 3. Statutory evidentiary rules
pt. 4. Appeals
pt. 5. Procedure
pt. 6. Expert witnesses and decision making
pt. 7. Expert evidence in court
pt. 8. Liability of experts
pt. 9. Medical, dental and nursing evidence
pt. 10. Mental health evidence
pt. 11. Social scientists' evidence
pt. 12. Scientists' evidence
pt. 13. Police evidence
pt. 14. Accident reconstruction evidence
pt. 15. Foreign law evidence
pt. 16. Financial evidence
pt. 17. Construction evidence
pt. 18. Intellectual property evidence.