Results 151 to 160 of about 51,209 (194)
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The right to a fair trial and the right to interpreting

Interpreting. International Journal of Research and Practice in Interpreting, 2022
Abstract The right to a fair trial for defendants in the criminal process is internationally recognised as a fundamental human right that, among others, includes the right of defendants to have the free assistance of an interpreter if they cannot understand or speak the language used in court.
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The Right to a Fair Trial

2018
This Chapter presents a detailed analysis of those fair trial rights under international law that are most likely affected by the involvement of court interpreters: the right of equality before the court; the right to adversarial proceedings; the right to be informed of the charge; the right to adequate time and facilities to prepare a defense; the ...
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Fair Trial Rights

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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Fair Trial Rights

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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Right to a Fair Trial

2018
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Barkhuysen, T.   +3 more
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The Right to a Fair Trial

1997
The papers of this volume deliver a survey of the implications of the fair trial principle with regard to criminal proceedings, ranging from the rights of the accused during the pre-trial procedure through the principle of impartiality of judges to the application of the right to a fair trial in emergency situations, both under domestic and ...
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Forfeiture and the Right to a Fair Trial

Criminal Law and Philosophy, 2019
In his Rights Forfeiture and Punishment, Christopher Heath Wellman argues that his preferred ‘strong’ version of rights forfeiture theory makes the moral rights of due process and a fair trial null and void for guilty offenders. They may still possess legal rights to due process, but these are not strong pre-institutional moral rights.
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Entrapment and the Right to a Fair Trial

Journal of African Law, 1999
State v. Hassen and Another [1998] 1 LRC 49 (Supreme Court of Soutfi Transvaal Provincial Division)The appellants had been apprehended as a result of a police trap, and were charged and convicted of contravening section 20 of the Diamonds Act, 1986. They appealed on die grounds that entrapment and the use of evidence obtained as a result of a police ...
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Fair Trial Rights of the Accused

2001
Use this collection of over 60 primary documents to trace the evolution of trial rights from English and colonial beginnings to our contemporary understanding of their meaning. Court cases and other documents bring to life the controversies that have historically surrounded the rights of those who have been accused in the American legal system ...
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