Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Statistics in the Law of Evidence - Nicholas  Lennings

Statistics in the Law of Evidence

By: Nicholas Lennings

Paperback | 21 May 2026

At a Glance

Paperback


RRP $86.99

$79.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $19.94 with

 or 

Ships in 25 to 30 business days

This book evaluates the role played by statistical evidence in litigation. Despite the increasing prevalence of statistical evidence in modern litigation, how such evidence should be admitted and used by courts is often inconsistent and widely criticised. Accepting that statistical evidence can lead to more accurate decisions, the book proposes criteria that could allow courts to decide that statistical evidence is good for fact-finding.

The many and varied scholarly debates regarding statistical evidence have by and large avoided judicial attention. Unlike previous works, this book contextualises those debates in the language and practice of evidence law, focusing principally on Australia, as well as the UK and the USA.

It does so by identifying that the controversy around statistical evidence follows the three-tiered statistical syllogism underlying statistical inference: first, whether statistical evidence is capable of establishing an association between phenomena in a state of nature; second, inferring that phenomena to an individual from the general association; and third, whether statistical evidence can be sufficient for proof of contested facts. Objections are said to arise at each level of this syllogism and, by mapping these objections onto evidence law, the book argues that a pathway for the judicial evaluation of statistical evidence can be constructed.

More in Comparative Law

The Law of State Immunity - Terry Adams
The Ways of Negative Comparative Law - Pierre Legrand

RRP $336.00

$289.75

14%
OFF
Comparative Law in Asia : Essays in Honour of Andrew Harding - Munin  Pongsapan
Constitutional Effectiveness : The Case of Germany's Basic Law - Dieter Grimm
AI Fairness and Beyond : Law, Regulation, and Technology - Chris  Reed