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The psychiatric expert in court
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 July 2009
Synopsis
The law about expert evidence is unsatisfactory: it gives scope for the expert to usurp the role of judge, jury and parliament; it brings the professions of the experts into disrepute; and it sets juries the impossible task of sorting pseudo sciences from genuine ones. The law should be reformed by changing statutes which force expert witnesses to testify beyond their science, by taking the provision of expert evidence out of the adversarial context, and by removing from the courts the decision whether a nascent discipline is or is not a science.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1984
References
Notes
1 [1975] Q.B. 834, 841.
2 Folkes v. Chadd (1782) 3 Doug. 157.
3 R. v. Siherlock [1894], 2 Q.B. 766.
4 Ramsay v. Watson (1961) 108 C.L.R. 642.
5 Anderson v. The Queen [1972] A.C. 100.
6 English Exporters (London) Ltd. v. Eldonwall Ltd. [1973] Ch. 415.
7 [1894], 2 Q.B. 766.
8 R. v. Crouch (1850) 11 Cox C.C. 546.
9 English Exporters (London) Ltd. v. Eldonwall Ltd. [1973] Ch. 415.
10 [1974] A.C. 85.
11 Kenny, Anthony (1978). The Aristotelian Ethics. Oxford University Press: Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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14 ibid. p. 208.
15 22 April 1977.
16 s. 4 (2).
17 [1968] 1 Q.B. 159.
18 ibid. p. 164.
19 For example, R. v. Byrne [1960] 2 Q.B. 396, 404, per Lord Parker C.J.
20 Report of the Committee on Mentally Abnormal Offenders, Cmnd. 6244 (1975), Ch. 18.
21 (1955) 99 C.L.R. 111, 119, per Dixon C.J., Kitto and Taylor J.J.
22 [1975] Q.B. 834, 841.
23 ibid.
24 [1974] A.C. 85.
25 [1975] Q.B. p. 842.
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