Concept information
Terme préférentiel
complex evidence in litigation
Définition
- Complex litigation tends to get framed as a problem for the jury system, but it is more properly viewed as a problem for any fact finder—juror, judge, arbitrator, expert panel—and for the litigants and their attorneys. Still, the jury framing is useful because it brings into focus some of the resources a fact finder needs to tackle the problem: attention, memory storage and retrieval, education and training, and life experience. [Source: Encyclopedia of Psychology and Law; Complex Evidence in Litigation]
Concept générique
Appartient au groupe
URI
http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/N9J-VLV6DM38-3
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