The Judicial Assessment of Expert Evidence by Deirdre Dwyer
Requirements: PDF Reader, 2.2 MB
Overview: Justice systems increasingly rely on expert evidence. We are therefore obliged to justify the courts' ability to assess this evidence, especially when the courts must resolve disagreements between experts or address possible bias. By reintegrating contemporary evidence theory with applied philosophy, Deirdre Dwyer analyses the epistemological basis for the judicial assessment of expert evidence.
Genre: Non-Fiction > Law

Download Instructions:
(Closed Filehost) https://cloudyfiles.org/i6xtotu3jubp
https://dailyuploads.net/pwg28j2eg1t3
https://userscloud.com/6ni3xf2uspwb
Requirements: PDF Reader, 2.2 MB
Overview: Justice systems increasingly rely on expert evidence. We are therefore obliged to justify the courts' ability to assess this evidence, especially when the courts must resolve disagreements between experts or address possible bias. By reintegrating contemporary evidence theory with applied philosophy, Deirdre Dwyer analyses the epistemological basis for the judicial assessment of expert evidence.
Genre: Non-Fiction > Law
Download Instructions:
(Closed Filehost) https://cloudyfiles.org/i6xtotu3jubp
https://dailyuploads.net/pwg28j2eg1t3
https://userscloud.com/6ni3xf2uspwb