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LIRA@BC Law

Abstract

The piece briefly traces the history of the use of social science in the courtroom, and proceeds to critically measure this form of proof (particularly “syndrome” evidence) against both the reliability standards imposed by Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and the traditional requirements for admission of expert testimony. Drawing upon empirical research concerning juries and decision-making as well as transcripts of the use of behavioral evidence at trial, I conclude that much of this testimony should be rejected. Rather than providing meaningful assistance to the jury, social science experts can distort the accuracy of the fact-finding process and imperil the fairness of the proceeding.

Files

File nameDate UploadedVisibilityFile size
Brodin_Behavioral_Final.pdf
7 Sep 2022
Public
9.86 MB

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Metadata

  • Subject
    • Evidence

  • Journal title
    • University of Cincinnati Law Review

  • Volume
    • 73

  • Pagination
    • 867-943

  • Date submitted

    7 September 2022

  • Keywords