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Criminal Law

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Manson And Its Progeny: An Empirical Analysis Of American Eyewitness Law, Nicholas A. Kahn-Fogel Jan 2012

Manson And Its Progeny: An Empirical Analysis Of American Eyewitness Law, Nicholas A. Kahn-Fogel

Faculty Scholarly Works

Since the Supreme Court established the current constitutional framework for determining the admissibility of eyewitness identification evidence in Manson v. Brathwaite in 1977, scientists and scholars who have evaluated the opinion have uniformly criticized it as insufficient to deter police from using flawed identification procedures and inconsistent with scientific evidence of the best ways to assess the reliability of evidence tainted by such procedures. Until now, however, the work of these scientists and scholars has been based primarily on simulation experiments and on a selective assortment of easily criticized judicial decisions applying Manson. This study provides the first systematic analysis …


Academics Making A Difference: Prosecutor Disclosure Obligations In Criminal Cases, Laurel Terry Jan 2011

Academics Making A Difference: Prosecutor Disclosure Obligations In Criminal Cases, Laurel Terry

Faculty Scholarly Works

No abstract provided.


The Church Abuse Scandal: Were Crimes Against Humanity Committed?, Dermot Groome Jan 2011

The Church Abuse Scandal: Were Crimes Against Humanity Committed?, Dermot Groome

Faculty Scholarly Works

No abstract provided.


International Criminal Law, Dermot Groome, Donald E. Shaver Jan 2008

International Criminal Law, Dermot Groome, Donald E. Shaver

Faculty Scholarly Works

No abstract provided.


Re-Evaluating The Theoretical Basis And Methodology Of International Criminal Trials, Dermot Groome Jan 2007

Re-Evaluating The Theoretical Basis And Methodology Of International Criminal Trials, Dermot Groome

Faculty Scholarly Works

No abstract provided.


Adjudicating Genocide: Is The International Court Of Justice Capable Of Judging State Criminal Responsibility?, Dermot Groome Jan 2007

Adjudicating Genocide: Is The International Court Of Justice Capable Of Judging State Criminal Responsibility?, Dermot Groome

Faculty Scholarly Works

Last February, the International Court of Justice issued a judgement adjudicating claims by Bosnia and Herzegovina that Serbia breached the 1948 Genocide Convention – the case marks the first time a state has made such claims against another. The alleged genocidal acts were the same as those that have been the subject of several criminal trials in the Yugoslav Tribunal. The judgment contained several landmark rulings – among them, the Court found that a state, as a state, could commit the crime of genocide and the applicable standard of proof for determining state responsibility is comparable to the standard used …