137 Available Episodes (137 Total)Average duration: 00:01:40
Apr 24, 2023
137 Deborah Denno
Unknown
Neuroscience Evidence in Criminal Cases. Debby Denno from Fordham Law School draws on a long-term empirical project and investigates what types of neuroscience evidence really drive criminal cases.
Apr 10, 2023
136 James Stone
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Past-Acts Evidence in Excessive Force Litigation. James Stone from Stanford University discusses some proposed reforms to the way that courts handle past-acts evidence, both with respect to plaintiffs and police-defendants, in excessive police force cases.
Mar 27, 2023
135 Alexandra Natapoff
Unknown
Snitching. Sasha Natapoff from Harvard Law School discusses the problems of criminal informant testimony.
Mar 13, 2023
134 Heidi Liu
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Provisional Assumptions. Heidi Liu from George Washington University Law School discusses the problems of asking jurors to ignore inadmissible evidence and proposes an alternative mechanism – the “provisional assumption.”
Feb 27, 2023
133 Thomas Albright & Brandon Garrett
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The Law and Science of Eyewitness Evidence. Brandon Garrett from Duke University and Thomas Albright from the Salk Institute discuss the latest research on the reliability of eyewitness testimony and related reforms that have surfaced from courts and legislatures.
Feb 13, 2023
132 David Caudill
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Expertise in Crisis. Dave Caudill from Villanova University discusses the current crisis expertise and how a more modest and sociological view of scientific inquiry might encourage greater acceptance of consensus science.
Jan 30, 2023
131 Steven Friedland & Amy Overman
Unknown
Neuroscience, Neutrality, and the Rules of Evidence.
Steven Friedland and Amy Overman from Elon University discuss how neuroscience findings about our cognitive biases should inform the way we think about the rules of evidence, and whether those rules can ever truly be neutral.
Jan 16, 2023
130 David Sklansky
Unknown
The Neglected Origins of the Hearsay Rule in American Slavery. David Sklansky of Stanford Law School discusses the Supreme Court case of Queen v. Hepburn, a freedom suit in the early Republic which proved to be a turning point in the development of the hearsay rule in American evidence law.
Dec 12, 2022
129 Andrew Ferguson
Unknown
Digital Habit Evidence. Andrew Ferguson from American University discusses the habit rule under Rule 406, and how the Internet of Things and digital habit evidence might change its importance in the future.
Nov 28, 2022
128 Ethan Leib
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Are the Federal Rules of Evidence Unconstitutional? Ethan Leib from Fordham University asks whether the way in which the Federal Rules of Evidence came into being and the structure by which they are amended violates constitutional separation of powers.
Apr 24 | Unknown
137 Deborah Denno
Apr 10 | Unknown
136 James Stone
Mar 27 | Unknown
135 Alexandra Natapoff
Mar 13 | Unknown
134 Heidi Liu
Feb 27 | Unknown
133 Thomas Albright & Brandon Garrett
Feb 13 | Unknown
132 David Caudill
Jan 30 | Unknown
131 Steven Friedland & Amy Overman
Jan 16 | Unknown
130 David Sklansky
Dec 12 | Unknown
129 Andrew Ferguson
Nov 28 | Unknown
128 Ethan Leib
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