Counterintuitive expert psychological evidence in child sexual abuse trials in New Zealand Fred Seymour, Suzanne Blackwell, Sarah Calvert, Briar McLean
By: Seymour, Fred.
Contributor(s): Blackwell, Suzanne | Calvert, Sarah | McLean, Briar.
Material type: ArticleSeries: Psychiatry, Psychology and Law.Publisher: Taylor & Francis, 2014Subject(s): EVIDENCE | EVIDENCE ACT 2006 | JUSTICE | NEW ZEALAND | LAW | CHILD SEXUAL ABUSEOnline resources: Read the abstract In: Psychiatry, Psychology and Law, 2014, 21(4): 511-522Summary: The authors discuss what is meant by the term counterintuitive evidence, why such evidence has been deemed helpful and the types of counterintuitive evidence currently given by psychologist expert witnesses in the New Zealand courts. (from the authors' abstract).Psychiatry, Psychology and Law, 2014, 21(4): 511-522
Record #4587
The authors discuss what is meant by the term counterintuitive evidence, why such evidence has been deemed helpful and the types of counterintuitive evidence currently given by psychologist expert witnesses in the New Zealand courts. (from the authors' abstract).