Judicial Process — Overview
This theme contains two subjects, namely: Civil Procedure and Evidence
Civil Procedure
Forthcoming Subject Events
June 2013
Friday 7 June 2013 Week 7
- Empirical Legal Studies Discussion Group
Title to be confirmed - Speaker: Dr Imogen Goold, Law Faculty, St Anne's College
Oxford Law Faculty Senior Common Room at 12:00
May 2014
Thursday 22 May 2014 Week 4
- Oxford Law Faculty
a test - Australia
Discussion Groups
These self-sustaining groups are an essential part of the life of our graduate school. They are organised in some cases by graduate students and in others by Faculty members and meet regularly during term, typically over a sandwich lunch, when one of the group presents work in progress or introduces a discussion of a particular issue or new case. They may also encompass guest speakers from the faculty and beyond.
Publications
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Showing key publications in this field, as selected by the author
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Show All 8 | Recent publications
A Higgins, 'Legal lessons from the News of the World phone hacking scandal' (2012) 31 Civil Justice Quarterly 274
C Hodges, The Costs and Funding of Civil Litigation: A Comparative Approach (C Hodges, S Vogenauer & M Tulibacka, Hart Publishing 2010)
Courses
The courses we offer in this field are:
Postgraduate
BCL
Our taught postgraduate programme, designed to serve outstanding law students from common-law backgrounds
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The aim of the course is to acquaint students with the fundamental principles of Civil Procedure. These principles are not specific to England but are common to all advanced systems of law. The operation and implications of these principles is discussed against the background of English law and the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights. A short introduction to English civil procedure is provided so that students not familiar with the English system could soon acquire a working knowledge. However, students coming from other jurisdiction are encouraged to consider how the principles and the ideas discussed in the lectures can play a part in their own home litigation systems.
Both lectures and seminars involve active student participation. The course consists of 16 to 22 lectures (some of 2 hours each), 8 seminars and 4 to 5 tutorials. The lectures are normally held in Michaelmas and Hilary Terms and the seminars in Trinity Term.
The seminars address central issues in contemporary procedure in England and elsewhere. The sessions are conducted by Professor Zuckerman with guest speakers, such as scholars, practitioners and judges from England and abroad. Tutorials may be concentrated in one term or spread over two or three terms and will be taken with Professor Zuckerman and Mr Higgins.
The course contains the following topics:
- General theory of civil adjudication
- An introduction to English civil procedure
- The procedural implications of the European Convention on Human Rights
- Adversarial Freedom, Court Control and Timely Justice; Sanctions for non-compliance with rules or orders; Summary Adjudication
- Interim injunctions
- Disclosure, including legal professional privilege and search orders
- Class Actions
- Appeal and Finality of Litigation
- Justice and Costs: The “winner recovers costs from loser” rule v. The no-costs rule; Economics and justice: hourly fees, conditional fees, contingency fees; Protection from costs: payment into court; security for costs; wasted costs orders
- Public Law Litigation: Intervention in proceedings; funding of public law litigation; peculiar features of litigation in specialist tribunals such as the Immigration Appeal Tribunal
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MJur
Our taught postgraduate programme, designed to serve outstanding law students from civil law backgrounds.
[less]
The aim of the course is to acquaint students with the fundamental principles of Civil Procedure. These principles are not specific to England but are common to all advanced systems of law. The operation and implications of these principles is discussed against the background of English law and the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights. A short introduction to English civil procedure is provided so that students not familiar with the English system could soon acquire a working knowledge. However, students coming from other jurisdiction are encouraged to consider how the principles and the ideas discussed in the lectures can play a part in their own home litigation systems.
Both lectures and seminars involve active student participation. The course consists of 16 to 22 lectures (some of 2 hours each), 8 seminars and 4 to 5 tutorials. The lectures are normally held in Michaelmas and Hilary Terms and the seminars in Trinity Term.
The seminars address central issues in contemporary procedure in England and elsewhere. The sessions are conducted by Professor Zuckerman with guest speakers, such as scholars, practitioners and judges from England and abroad. Tutorials may be concentrated in one term or spread over two or three terms and will be taken with Professor Zuckerman and Mr Higgins.
The course contains the following topics:
- General theory of civil adjudication
- An introduction to English civil procedure
- The procedural implications of the European Convention on Human Rights
- Adversarial Freedom, Court Control and Timely Justice; Sanctions for non-compliance with rules or orders; Summary Adjudication
- Interim injunctions
- Disclosure, including legal professional privilege and search orders
- Class Actions
- Appeal and Finality of Litigation
- Justice and Costs: The “winner recovers costs from loser” rule v. The no-costs rule; Economics and justice: hourly fees, conditional fees, contingency fees; Protection from costs: payment into court; security for costs; wasted costs orders
- Public Law Litigation: Intervention in proceedings; funding of public law litigation; peculiar features of litigation in specialist tribunals such as the Immigration Appeal Tribunal
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People
Civil Procedure teaching is organized by a Subject Group convened by:
Adrian Zuckerman: Professor of Civil Procedure
in conjunction with:
Roderick Bagshaw: CUF Lecturer
Denis Galligan: Professor of Socio-Legal Studies
James Goudkamp: University Lecturer (CUF)
Katharine Grevling: CUF Lecturer
Andrew Higgins: Lecturer in Civil Procedure
Mike Macnair: CUF Lecturer
Robert Sharpe: Visiting Professor
assisted by:
Inbar Levy: DPhil Law student
Also working in this field, but not involved in its teaching programme:
Isaak Meier: Professor at the University of Zurich for Civil Procedure, Insolvency law and Mediation
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Evidence
Publications
Showing selected publications sorted by title [change this]
Showing key publications in this field, as selected by the author
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Show All 39 | Recent publications
R M Bagshaw, 'Chapters on: \\\'Relevance, Admissibility and Weight; Previous and Subsequent Existence of Facts; The Best Evidence Rule\\\'; \\\'Corroboration, Supporting Evidence and Related Warnings\\\'; \\\'Identification\\\'; \\\'Physical Conditions, States of Mind and Emotions\\\'' in Hodge M Malek QC (ed), Phipson on Evidence, Seventeenth edition (Sweet & Maxwell 2010)
Laura Hoyano, 'Coroners And Justice Act 2009 -- (3) Special Measures Directions Take Two: Entrenching Unequal Access to Justice?' [2010] [2010] Criminal Law Review 345 [...]
This article maps (through diagrams) and analyses the changes made by the Coroners and Justice Act 2009 to existing Special Measures Directions for child witnesses, child defendants and complainants of sexual assault under the Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act 1999. Adult defendants suffering from some form of significant mental impairment are for the first time made eligible to apply for leave to testify using the live link and with the assistance of an intermediary. In addition, the 2009 Act deems witnesses to violent offences against the person involving the use of firearms or knives to be intimidated and hence automatically eligible for Special Measures. The article concludes that the measures for defendants do not go far enough and are susceptible to challenge under ECHR Article 6, and perhaps go too far in introducing anomalies in the treatment of different categories of intimidated witnesses.
Dr Emily Henderson, Professor Fred Seymour and Laura Hoyano, 'Expert Witnesses under Adversarial Examination in the Criminal and Family Courts' (2013) (forthcoming) [...]
This is an empirical research project funded by the New Zealand law foundation, examining how child protection experts experience the adversarial criminal trial system as compared with the more inquisitorial family court system,and the factors which inhibit them from choosing to become involved in expert testimony work. The Nuffield Foundation has invited the researchers to resubmit a funding proposal for a companion study of UK experts, which we will probably do following the conclusion of the New Zealand study, which should result in at least one Journal article.
Laura Hoyano, 'Section D14 Assisting a Witness or Defendant' in Lord Justice Hooper and Prof David Ormerod (eds), Blackstone’s Criminal Practice 2012 (Oxford University Press 2011) [...]
This is an entirely new chapter for Blackstone’s Criminal Practice, and explains the statutory provisions and case law governing (1) special measures for child and vulnerable witnesses, including defendants (2) best practice in questioning child and vulnerable witnesses and (3) witness anonymity orders.
Laura Hoyano and HHJ Johanna Cutts QC, 'Special Measures and Anonymity Orders to Facilitate Testimony by Witnesses and Defendants' in Lord Justice Hooper and Prof David Ormerod (eds), Blackstone’s Criminal Practice 2013 (OUP 2012) (forthcoming) [...]
This is a substantial rewrite of the section D4 of Blackstone’s Criminal Practice 2012, which was written as a new chapter of the book.
Courses
The courses we offer in this field are:
Postgraduate
BCL
Our taught postgraduate programme, designed to serve outstanding law students from common-law backgrounds
[less]
The Law of Evidence is a valuable subject in the BCL because it is in all common law jurisdictions still dominated by common principles. This means that overseas graduates can both bring more to it, and gain more from it.
The aim of the course is to establish the basic structure of this branch of the law to which all students can relate the knowledge they acquire so as to be able to grasp it instinctively and to be able to “think on their feet.” It is the one area which lawyers need to know in detail rather than know how to acquire since problems arise, often unexpectedly, in the course of a trial for which no preparation has been possible. The more thorough the understanding of basic principles the more readily the detail can be slotted in, or created. All of these features owe their existence to the fact that the law has been gradually accreted by individual decisions of the judges in the course of trials, sometimes without the benefit of extensive reference to materials. It is because judges have so often drawn upon their instinct for the fundamentals of this branch of the law that it has developed so similarly in different jurisdictions, and has largely resisted radical statutory intervention.
These factors have also created an opportunity for useful academic reflection to draw out the principles often left unarticulated beneath the surface of the decisions. The subject has benefited from a succession of particularly talented commentators such as Thayer and Wigmore in the United States, and Cross in the United Kingdom. It tends to be in the forefront of change as increasing efforts are made to streamline civil litigation, and to cope more effectively with an increasing tide of criminal cases. These have led to the proposal of a number of innovations such as the reform of the hearsay rule, and changes in the evidential use of silence or an accused person’s previous record. The law is also adapting to newer forms of record-keeping, and the exploitation of the possibilities offered by video-recording.
In all jurisdictions the subject is in constant ferment with new codes and consolidations under consideration or implemented. Since the subject tends to highlight perceived tension between the efficient resolution of disputes and the importance of resolving them fairly, it is never short of topicality or fierce controversy.
The course in Oxford concentrates more on central principles than on the minutiae of procedure, and makes an effort to draw upon the experience of the whole of the common law world.
Unlike most other BCL courses, the Law of Evidence is taught, as to the core, through 7 tutorials. There are also a range of lectures. Seminars, 6 in number, are held in Trinity Term.
A comprehensive reading list is available to support students reading the subject, and this is supplemented by a number of courses of lectures each developing a particular central aspect of the subject in more depth than is possible in a general survey of the whole subject. The main seminar currently takes place in Trinity term and is designed to explore particularly topical or difficult subjects by setting problems. The teaching group regards tutorials as very important, and these are arranged by the course convenor, at instance of college tutors. The examination is in the third week of the Summer vacation.
[less]
MJur
Our taught postgraduate programme, designed to serve outstanding law students from civil law backgrounds.
[less]
The Law of Evidence is a valuable subject in the BCL because it is in all common law jurisdictions still dominated by common principles. This means that overseas graduates can both bring more to it, and gain more from it.
The aim of the course is to establish the basic structure of this branch of the law to which all students can relate the knowledge they acquire so as to be able to grasp it instinctively and to be able to “think on their feet.” It is the one area which lawyers need to know in detail rather than know how to acquire since problems arise, often unexpectedly, in the course of a trial for which no preparation has been possible. The more thorough the understanding of basic principles the more readily the detail can be slotted in, or created. All of these features owe their existence to the fact that the law has been gradually accreted by individual decisions of the judges in the course of trials, sometimes without the benefit of extensive reference to materials. It is because judges have so often drawn upon their instinct for the fundamentals of this branch of the law that it has developed so similarly in different jurisdictions, and has largely resisted radical statutory intervention.
These factors have also created an opportunity for useful academic reflection to draw out the principles often left unarticulated beneath the surface of the decisions. The subject has benefited from a succession of particularly talented commentators such as Thayer and Wigmore in the United States, and Cross in the United Kingdom. It tends to be in the forefront of change as increasing efforts are made to streamline civil litigation, and to cope more effectively with an increasing tide of criminal cases. These have led to the proposal of a number of innovations such as the reform of the hearsay rule, and changes in the evidential use of silence or an accused person’s previous record. The law is also adapting to newer forms of record-keeping, and the exploitation of the possibilities offered by video-recording.
In all jurisdictions the subject is in constant ferment with new codes and consolidations under consideration or implemented. Since the subject tends to highlight perceived tension between the efficient resolution of disputes and the importance of resolving them fairly, it is never short of topicality or fierce controversy.
The course in Oxford concentrates more on central principles than on the minutiae of procedure, and makes an effort to draw upon the experience of the whole of the common law world.
Unlike most other BCL courses, the Law of Evidence is taught, as to the core, through 7 tutorials. There are also a range of lectures. Seminars, 6 in number, are held in Trinity Term.
A comprehensive reading list is available to support students reading the subject, and this is supplemented by a number of courses of lectures each developing a particular central aspect of the subject in more depth than is possible in a general survey of the whole subject. The main seminar currently takes place in Trinity term and is designed to explore particularly topical or difficult subjects by setting problems. The teaching group regards tutorials as very important, and these are arranged by the course convenor, at instance of college tutors. The examination is in the third week of the Summer vacation.
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People
Evidence teaching is organized by a Subject Group convened by:
Peter Mirfield: CUF Lecturer
in conjunction with:
Roderick Bagshaw: CUF Lecturer
Katharine Grevling: CUF Lecturer
Laura Hoyano: Hackney Fellow & Tutor in Law and CUF Lecturer
Also working in this field, but not involved in its teaching programme:
Andrew Ashworth: Vinerian Professor of English Law
Denis Galligan: Professor of Socio-Legal Studies
Adrian Zuckerman: Professor of Civil Procedure
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