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16 Aust. & N.Z. J. Criminology 1 (1983)

handle is hein.journals/anzjc16 and id is 1 raw text is: 










AUST & NZ JOURNAL  OF CRIMINOLOGY  (March 1983) 16 (1-3)


                                EDITORIAL

 The Laws of Evidence-the  Inner Sanctum?
   In July 1979, the Australian Law Reform Commission was asked by the Federal
Attorney-General  to review the laws of evidence applicable in proceedings in
Federal Courts and the Courts of the Territories with a view to producing a wholly
comprehensive  law of evidence based on concepts appropriate to current conditions
and  anticipated requirements.
   It is a massive task, arguably the largest given to the Law Reform Commission,
and all the more daunting because of the voluminous body of law, both judge-made
and  statute which has sprouted in the area. There is widespread agreement that
much  of the Australian law of evidence is in need of substantial reform The New
South Wales  Law  Reform  Commission  in its Report on The Rule Against Hearsay
(1978) stated:
      The  law  of evidence  is in constant use.  It is basic to the  proper
      administration of justice. Yet in our view much of it is complicated, obscure,
      irrational, and sometimes unjust in operation (p 25).
Traditionally, the law of evidence has been seen as perhaps the classic example of
lawyers' law-technical  rules, elaborated and refined continuously over the
decades by judicial decisions into a highly complex maze of rules and exceptions
comprehensible  only to the professionals. If the law in general is seen as a closed
castle, the laws of evidence are the inner sanctum. As a consequence, the laws of
evidence have  been left almost entirely to the lawyers; criminologists and other
non-legal researchers generally leaving well alone what they don't know.  As
McBarnett   has  recently observed: Sociologists may,  in pointing  out how
defendants are mystified by the law, also have been too readily deterred by the
mystique themselves. (Conviction-Law, The State and The Construction of Justice
1981 p 9.) The laws of evidence are very much part of this mystique.
  In fact, the laws of evidence as the New South Wales Law Reform Commission
stated are basic to the proper administration of justice. They should reflect the
central aims and purposes of a criminal trial and enable those aims and purposes to
be carried out. Hence, any analysis of the laws of evidence demands a consideration
of the proper aims and functions of the criminal trial and of the best means of
achieving these goals. One might instance the question of using the rules of evidence
to exercise some control over police practices, a matter on which the Australian
High Court and the English House of Lords have adopted different stances. Broad
issues such as these fall squarely within the province of criminology, and are not
simply matters for lawyers. Likewise, the role of the laws of evidence in maintaining
the proper balance between the community's need to have the guilty convicted and
the rights of the individual to a fair trial are matters of direct and obvious relevance
to persons in the field of criminology. Similarly, questions of the reliability of


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