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Expert Witnesses: Criminologists in the Courtroom
Paperback

Expert Witnesses: Criminologists in the Courtroom

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For the first time a book documents the judicial system’s new dependence on social science testimony, especially that rendered by sociologists and criminologists. In Expert Witnesses contributors show that unlike traditional forensics testimony, the intrusion of social science data into judicial decision-making has relatively recent origins. It details the uses and abuses of social science experts, and the ethical and pragmatic concerns raised by their testimony. This timely collection will appeal to a diverse audience, including attorneys, judges, and students of judicial proceedings. Included in this volume are historical examinations of the expert witnessing phenomenon, the legal, social, and ethical debates regarding the appropriate role of such witnesses, and anecdotal descriptions by eminent social science experts. The authors address such pragmatic issues as an attorney’s perspective on finding the most appropriate expert or formulating the best questions to ask in court, and an expert’s perspective on getting aid or terminating a nonworking attorney-expert relationship.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
State University of New York Press
Country
United States
Date
1 July 1987
Pages
237
ISBN
9780887064494

For the first time a book documents the judicial system’s new dependence on social science testimony, especially that rendered by sociologists and criminologists. In Expert Witnesses contributors show that unlike traditional forensics testimony, the intrusion of social science data into judicial decision-making has relatively recent origins. It details the uses and abuses of social science experts, and the ethical and pragmatic concerns raised by their testimony. This timely collection will appeal to a diverse audience, including attorneys, judges, and students of judicial proceedings. Included in this volume are historical examinations of the expert witnessing phenomenon, the legal, social, and ethical debates regarding the appropriate role of such witnesses, and anecdotal descriptions by eminent social science experts. The authors address such pragmatic issues as an attorney’s perspective on finding the most appropriate expert or formulating the best questions to ask in court, and an expert’s perspective on getting aid or terminating a nonworking attorney-expert relationship.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
State University of New York Press
Country
United States
Date
1 July 1987
Pages
237
ISBN
9780887064494