Evidence Assessment and Standards of Proof: a Messy Issue
TUZER, GIOVANNI. Evidence Assessment and Standards of Proof: a Messy Issue [artículos de revistas]. 2021. Publicado en: Quaestio facti. Revista internacional sobre razonamiento probatorio, n.2 , 87-113
The article distinguishes evidence assessment criteria from standards of proof and ad-dresses three main questions. First: why do some scholars and decision-makers take assessment cri-teria as standards of proof and vice versa? The answer comes from the fact that some legal systems are more concerned with assessment criteria and others with standards; therefore, jurists educated in different contexts tend to emphasize what they are more familiar with, and to assimilate to it what they are less familiar with. Second: why do systems differ in those respects? Here the answer stems from the historical, institutional and procedural differences that explain why some systems are more concerned with assessment criteria and others with standards of proof. And third, assum-ing that both criteria and standards are necessary to legal decision-making about facts: how can a system work if it neglects one of these things? Here the article argues that there is a functional con-nection between criteria and standards. The functional connection account is distinguished from a functional equivalence account, and some systems and jurisdictions are referred to in greater detail to support the functional connection claim