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Hearsay

2022
Abstract This chapter discusses the common law hearsay prohibition and its modern statutory incarnation under the CJA 2003. The ‘rule against hearsay’ is an iconic feature of common law evidence. It can be conceptualized as the flipside of the principle of orality: a preference for first-hand oral testimony is simultaneously a ...
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HEARSAY

The Yale Review, 2010
This demo will present HearSay, a multi-modal non-visual web browser, which aims to bridge the growing Web Accessibility divide between individuals with visual impairments and their sighted counterparts, and to facilitate full participation of blind individuals in the growing Web-based society.
Yevgen Borodin   +7 more
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Hearsay

2018
Abstract This chapter returns to Denis Diderot and speculates on how his life-long fascination with blindness may have influenced his theories on visual art. For example, why does he open “Notes on Painting” (1765) with a description of a blind woman?
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Hearsay

Proceedings of the 13th international conference on World Wide Web, 2004
In this paper we present HearSay, a system for browsing hypertext Web documents via audio. The HearSay system is based on our novel approach to automatically creating audio browsable content from hypertext Web documents. It combines two key technologies: (1) automatic partitioning of Web documents through tightly coupled structural and semantic ...
I. V. Ramakrishnan   +2 more
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Hearsay

1996
Abstract Soon after Pyotr Ilyich’s death there appeared, and for a while persevered, a legend that he had died not from cholera, but because he had voluntarily poisoned himself. I personally started to believe in this leg end without much difficulty after I became acquainted with the Sixth Symphony, the content of which seemed to provide
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Hearsay

Abstract This chapter discusses hearsay evidence in criminal proceedings that is regulated by sections 114–126 CJA 2003, of which the main legislative provisions are set out in A17.3. Section 114 should not be used simply to bypass other procedures available to the prosecution.
Bartholomew Dalton, Caroline Liggins
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18. Hearsay Evidence

2014
Hearsay evidence in criminal cases most often arises in two situations: if a witness testifies about facts of which he has no personal knowledge because the facts were communicated to the witness by another person who is not in court; and where a witness’ written statement is put before the court because the witness is unable to attend court to give ...
Martin Hannibal, Lisa Mountford
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6. Hearsay evidence …

2013
This chapter, which focuses on hearsay evidence and its relationship to confessions, first considers the rule against hearsay and its application to out-of-court statements of witnesses in civil and criminal cases. It then looks at statements, both oral and written, and gestures, as well as the admissibility of hearsay in criminal proceedings under the
Maureen Spencer, John Spencer
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Exceptions to the Hearsay Rule

1999
In civil proceedings s. 1 of the Civil Evidence Act 1995 provides that evidence is no longer inadmissible merely on the ground that it is hearsay, although certain notice conditions generally have to be complied with to ensure the judge does not attach insufficient weight to the evidence (8.1 post). The notice provisions are unnecessary if the evidence
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The Holocaust as Hearsay?

2004
R. v. Zundel is the only criminal prosecution of a Holocaust denier in the common law world. As we have seen, this complicated life for trial judge Hugh Locke, whose controversial refusal to take judicial notice of the Holocaust was grounded on common law norms of adversarialism. But this was not Locke’s only difficult ruling.
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