Benchbook in the Behavioral Sciences
Demosthenes Lorandos and Terence W. Campbell
Thousands of judges,
attorneys, and court personnel have to deal with experts in the
behavioral sciences every day. Expert testimony from behavioral
scientists (psychiatrists, psychologists, and social workers) is
the fastest growing area of expertise in American courts.
The U.S. Supreme Court
decisions in Daubert, Joiner, and Kumho Tire
have profoundly altered the rules of evidence regarding expert
testimony. Recent research demonstrates that the judges,
attorneys, and court personnel required to implement those
changes have little understanding of how to do this with the
behavioral sciences. The Federal Rules of Evidence have just
been amended to reflect the changes wrought by the Daubert,
Joiner, Kumho Tire trilogy. And yet there are no
guidelines, practice books, or judicial decision-making manuals
that even remotely speak to "gatekeeping" responsibilities with
the behavioral sciences.
Lorandos and Campbell
provide immediate access to authoritative information and
immediate decision-making tools for judges, attorneys, and court
personnel. The book is designed to provide basic data for
decision-making and to integrate smoothly into an on-line
seminar for trial court judges and court personnel. It is also a
comprehensive text with immediate utility as a decision-making
tool. Extensively researched in law and the sciences,
Benchbook in the Behavioral Sciences provides up-to-date legal
and scientific data to aid judges, attorneys, and court
personnel in their daily decision making with expert reports and
testimony. |
View Table of
Contents and introductory material.
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