After your casebook, Casenote Legal Briefs will be your most important reference source for the entire semester. It is the most popular legal briefs series available, with over 130 titles, and is relied on by thousands of students for its expert case summaries, comprehensive analysis of concurrences and dissents, as well as of the majority opinion in the briefs. Casenotes Features: Keyed to specific casebooks by title/author Most current briefs available Redesigned for greater student accessibility Sample brief with element descriptions called out Redesigned chapter opener provides rule of law and page number for each brief Quick Course Outline chart included with major titles Revised glossary in dictionary format
John Banville’s stunning powers of mimicry are brilliantly on display in this engrossing novel, the darkly compelling confession of an improbable murderer.
How seeing turns into showing, how empirical observations turn into explanation and evidence. How to produce and consume evidence presentations.
Written from an advocate's perspective, this guide introduces how the courtroom operates and offers a glimpse into the environment that influences these rulings. Major cases and doctrines are discussed. Examples...
This Dimas Hardy thriller is “a compelling combination of courtroom drama and whodunit.
High probability by itself is too weak for evidence, since h's probability may be high with or without e. ... the fact that the hypothesis that all ravens are black is satisfied by the one black raven I have observed is not by itself a ...
Forsyth & Forsyth, 280 A.D.2d 79, 720 N.Y.S.2d 654 (App Div. 4th Dep't 2001) (in legal malpractice action, evidence of insurance coverage admissible to prove the issue of collectability), or to show bias, ...
Reprint of the original, first published in 1868.
To deepen student learning, this edition comes with digital study aids, accessible at eproducts.westacademic.com.
They are the true heroes of this work. - Carla L. Zembal-Saul, Katherine McNeill, and Kimber Hershberger What's Your Evidence?
Human Health and Performance Risks of Space Exploration Missions: Evidence Reviewed by the NASA Human Research Program