Description
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC The Trial on Trial: Volume 1: Truth and Due Process by Edited by Antony Duff Edited by Lindsay Farmer Edited by Sandra Marshall Edited by Victor Tadros
The trial is central to the institutional framework of criminal justice. It provides the procedural link between crime and punishment and is the forum in which both guilt and innocence and sentence are determined. Its continuing significance is evidenced by the heated responses drawn by recent government proposals to reform rules of criminal procedure and evidence so as to alter the status of the trial within the criminal justice process and to limit the role of the jury. Yet for all of the attachment to trial by jury and to principles safeguarding the right to a fair trial there has been remarkably little theoretical reflection on the meaning of fairness in the trial and criminal procedure the relationship between rules of evidence procedure and substantive law or the functions and normative foundations of the trial process. There is a need in other words to develop a normative understanding of the criminal trial. The book is based on the proceedings of two workshops which took place in 2003 addressing the theme of Truth and Due Process in the Criminal Trial.The essays in the book are concerned with the question of whether and in what sense we can take the discovery of truth to be the central aim of the procedural and evidential rules and practices of criminal investigation and trial. They are divided into four parts addressing distinct but inter-related issues: models of the trial (Duff Matravers McEwan); the meaning of due process (Gunther Dubber); the meaning of truth and the nature of evidence (Jung Pritchard); and legitimacy and rhetoric in the trial (Burns Christodoulidis).show more