Skip to main content
  • Textbook
  • © 1999

Evidence

Authors:

  • Studentoriented with the principal areas of Evidence covered in depth
    Priced competitively to suit the budget of students
    Includes the underlying principles and policy considerations which explain why the law has evolved to its present state
    Satisfies needs of undergraduates and students on LPC and BVC; comprehensive but presented in a clear way so as not to overwhelm

Part of the book series: Macmillan Law Masters (MLM)

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check for access.

Table of contents (17 chapters)

  1. Front Matter

    Pages i-xliv
  2. Introduction

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 1-9
  3. Preliminaries

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 10-25
  4. Relevance and ‘Similar Facts’

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 26-90
  5. The Criminal Evidence Act 1898

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 91-125
  6. The Scope of the Hearsay Rule

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 126-153
  7. Exceptions to the Hearsay Rule

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 154-182
  8. Admissions

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 183-218
  9. Hearsay in Civil Proceedings

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 219-222
  10. Silence as Evidence

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 223-243
  11. Evidence Obtained by Unlawful or Unfair Means

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 244-259
  12. Safeguards against Unreliability and Error

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 260-295
  13. Opinion Evidence

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 296-314
  14. Disclosure and Public Interest Immunity

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 315-328
  15. Privilege

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 329-341
  16. The Mechanics of Proof

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 342-385
  17. The Trial

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 386-428
  18. Sexual Experience as Evidence

    • Raymond Emson
    Pages 429-439
  19. Back Matter

    Pages 440-444

About this book

Evidence is a student-oriented approach to the subject in a market dominated by overly detailed and weighty books. It explains in depth the principles and policies which have influenced the evolution of the law, examining the fundamentals not the minutiae. The book will satisfy the needs of undergraduates approaching the subject at an academic level while also providing a clear and up-to-date exposition of the law for students on the LPC and BVC.

About the author

RAYMOND EMSON, LLM, Barrister, is a lawyer in the Government Legal Service currently based in the Law Commission. He is part of the team working on reforming the criminal law.

Bibliographic Information