Expert Knowledge as a Condition of the Rhetorical Situation in Criminal Cases

This article focuses on the use of expert knowledge as a basis for legal decisions in serious criminal cases. Using a model that describes rhetorical situations, as well as empirical material based on 150 court decisions, the aim is to analyse the conditions surrounding the use o...

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Main Authors: Eva Friis, Karsten Åström
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Scandinavian University Press (Universitetsforlaget) 2017-01-01
Series:Oslo Law Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.idunn.no/oslo_law_review/2017/01/expert_knowledge_as_a_condition_of_the_rhetorical_situation
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spelling doaj-fcae1b853f5a4310a8d382866d97fbbb2020-11-25T03:46:08ZengScandinavian University Press (Universitetsforlaget)Oslo Law Review2387-32992017-01-014284710.18261/issn.2387-3299-2017-01-0218948693Expert Knowledge as a Condition of the Rhetorical Situation in Criminal CasesEva FriisKarsten ÅströmThis article focuses on the use of expert knowledge as a basis for legal decisions in serious criminal cases. Using a model that describes rhetorical situations, as well as empirical material based on 150 court decisions, the aim is to analyse the conditions surrounding the use of expert evidence in criminal law processes, to what extent and by whom such evidence is used, and how it affects the outcome of the cases. The rhetorical situation in criminal cases is reconstructed to include the exigence (urgent issue that requires addressing) and, thereby, the related discourse, in order to retrieve relevant conditions, which could be identified as evidentially favourable or unfavourable to the suspect and the prosecutor respectively. It is concluded that there is a theoretical imbalance between the parties to the benefit of the defendant. Empirically grounded analysis of the criminal cases shows, however, that the defendant’s theoretical advantage does not correspond to the actual situation in court. The results indicate that the defendant usually adopts a passive stance and therefore does not use favourable constraints effectively. The study also shows that the defendant’s chances of winning the case increase when they use written expert evidence and expert witnesses.https://www.idunn.no/oslo_law_review/2017/01/expert_knowledge_as_a_condition_of_the_rhetorical_situationLegal reasoning; expert knowledge; criminal law process; rhetorical situation; rhetorical constraintsLegalreasoning;expertknowledge;criminallawprocess;rhetoricalsituation;rhetoricalconstraints
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eva Friis
Karsten Åström
spellingShingle Eva Friis
Karsten Åström
Expert Knowledge as a Condition of the Rhetorical Situation in Criminal Cases
Oslo Law Review
Legal reasoning; expert knowledge; criminal law process; rhetorical situation; rhetorical constraints
Legalreasoning;expertknowledge;criminallawprocess;rhetoricalsituation;rhetoricalconstraints
author_facet Eva Friis
Karsten Åström
author_sort Eva Friis
title Expert Knowledge as a Condition of the Rhetorical Situation in Criminal Cases
title_short Expert Knowledge as a Condition of the Rhetorical Situation in Criminal Cases
title_full Expert Knowledge as a Condition of the Rhetorical Situation in Criminal Cases
title_fullStr Expert Knowledge as a Condition of the Rhetorical Situation in Criminal Cases
title_full_unstemmed Expert Knowledge as a Condition of the Rhetorical Situation in Criminal Cases
title_sort expert knowledge as a condition of the rhetorical situation in criminal cases
publisher Scandinavian University Press (Universitetsforlaget)
series Oslo Law Review
issn 2387-3299
publishDate 2017-01-01
description This article focuses on the use of expert knowledge as a basis for legal decisions in serious criminal cases. Using a model that describes rhetorical situations, as well as empirical material based on 150 court decisions, the aim is to analyse the conditions surrounding the use of expert evidence in criminal law processes, to what extent and by whom such evidence is used, and how it affects the outcome of the cases. The rhetorical situation in criminal cases is reconstructed to include the exigence (urgent issue that requires addressing) and, thereby, the related discourse, in order to retrieve relevant conditions, which could be identified as evidentially favourable or unfavourable to the suspect and the prosecutor respectively. It is concluded that there is a theoretical imbalance between the parties to the benefit of the defendant. Empirically grounded analysis of the criminal cases shows, however, that the defendant’s theoretical advantage does not correspond to the actual situation in court. The results indicate that the defendant usually adopts a passive stance and therefore does not use favourable constraints effectively. The study also shows that the defendant’s chances of winning the case increase when they use written expert evidence and expert witnesses.
topic Legal reasoning; expert knowledge; criminal law process; rhetorical situation; rhetorical constraints
Legalreasoning;expertknowledge;criminallawprocess;rhetoricalsituation;rhetoricalconstraints
url https://www.idunn.no/oslo_law_review/2017/01/expert_knowledge_as_a_condition_of_the_rhetorical_situation
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