Overview

LAWS2351 is only available in T1 by School Consent. Contact UNSW Law Student Services for more information.  Court Process, Evidence and Proof provides students with an analytical study of the law of evidence and civil and criminal court processes. These topics are examined in their legal, ethical and socio-psychological dimensions. … For more content click the Read More button below.  Main Topics   The criminal trial, fundamental principles, accusatorialism and the presumption of innocenceIndictments and criminal pleadingsScreening weak cases and disclosurePre-trial and trial prosecutorial obligations;The jury, judges proofFair trials, rationalismRelevanceDiscretionary and mandatory exclusions;The witness in the box (testimonial competence and compellability, communication, questioning witnesses in court (examination in chief, cross examination, reexamination, unfavourable witnesses, credibility attacks on witnesses)The hearsay rule and its exceptionsIdentification EvidenceEvidence of OpinionThe accused (as a witness, his/her right to silence, character, tendency and coincidence evidence)Unreliable evidence, judicial directions and warnings.  Court Process, Evidence and Proof is one of the core subjects for law and will normally be taken after completion of Criminal Laws. It fits within the criminal law stream.

Conditions for Enrolment

Prerequisite: LAWS1021 Crime and Criminal Process and LAWS1022 Criminal Laws.

Delivery

Multimodal - Standard (usually weekly or fortnightly)
In-person - Standard (usually weekly or fortnightly)

Fees

Pre-2019 Handbook Editions

Access past handbook editions (2018 and prior)