legal standards, conceptions, and procedures for determining admissibility. The paper details how the opposing lawyers, the expert witness, and the judge vie to contingently work out what will count in court as appropriate scientific authority, methods and evidence, and as a scientifically valid and legally admissible account of "reasonable fear." When science becomes enmeshed in legal controversies, science does not trump law. Rather, it is the court's canons of proper procedure and measures of substantive adequacy that take precedence." /> Demonstrating "reasonable fear" at trial - Lee Burns Stacy | sdvig press

Demonstrating "reasonable fear" at trial

is it science or junk science?

Stacy Lee Burns

pp. 107-131


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