Results 151 to 160 of about 103,249 (214)
Giving medicine a fair trial. Blanket enthusiasm for trials won't help.
Imre Szebik
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2005
Abstract When the trial of Saddam Hussein began in Iraq, media coverage in many countries included soundbites from ordinary Iraqis. Should Saddam be tried? In one such story, the first respondent says no, his crimes are too many; ‘[h]e should be cut into pieces’. A second concedes that the former president made mistakes, but asks, did he
Susan Marks, Andrew Clapham
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Abstract When the trial of Saddam Hussein began in Iraq, media coverage in many countries included soundbites from ordinary Iraqis. Should Saddam be tried? In one such story, the first respondent says no, his crimes are too many; ‘[h]e should be cut into pieces’. A second concedes that the former president made mistakes, but asks, did he
Susan Marks, Andrew Clapham
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2022
Abstract This chapter explores the core evidentiary principle that criminal trials must be ‘fair’. It weaves together jurisprudential strands from common law precedents, judicial interpretations, and applications of section 78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984, and contemporary human rights jurisprudence elucidating Article 6 ...
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Abstract This chapter explores the core evidentiary principle that criminal trials must be ‘fair’. It weaves together jurisprudential strands from common law precedents, judicial interpretations, and applications of section 78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984, and contemporary human rights jurisprudence elucidating Article 6 ...
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2009
Abstract The right to a fair trial embodied in Article 6 ECHR is central to the establishment and maintenance of a free and democratic society. Its object and purpose is ‘to enshrine the fundamental principle of the rule of law’and should be given a broad and purposive interpretation, rather than a restrictive one.
David Bentley, Richard Thomas
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Abstract The right to a fair trial embodied in Article 6 ECHR is central to the establishment and maintenance of a free and democratic society. Its object and purpose is ‘to enshrine the fundamental principle of the rule of law’and should be given a broad and purposive interpretation, rather than a restrictive one.
David Bentley, Richard Thomas
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2003
Abstract See, generally, A Le Sueur, ‘Access to Justice Rights in the United Kingdom’ 11.15 [2000] EHRLR 457 and D Squires, ‘Access to a Court after Witham, Lightfoot and Saleem’ [2001] JR 38.
Richard Clayton, Hugh Tomlinson
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Abstract See, generally, A Le Sueur, ‘Access to Justice Rights in the United Kingdom’ 11.15 [2000] EHRLR 457 and D Squires, ‘Access to a Court after Witham, Lightfoot and Saleem’ [2001] JR 38.
Richard Clayton, Hugh Tomlinson
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2001
Abstract This book is a reprint of the Chapter on Fair Trial Rights from the authors' major practitioner text, The Law of Human Rights; its separate publication in this form is intended to make it accessible to those who might not want to buy the larger work.
Richard Clayton, Hugh Tomlinson
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Abstract This book is a reprint of the Chapter on Fair Trial Rights from the authors' major practitioner text, The Law of Human Rights; its separate publication in this form is intended to make it accessible to those who might not want to buy the larger work.
Richard Clayton, Hugh Tomlinson
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