国家的证人:儿童与现代证据法的形成

IF 0.8 3区 社会学 Q1 HISTORY Law and History Review Pub Date : 2024-05-13 DOI:10.1017/s0738248024000099
Laura Savarese
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文指出了十九世纪末二十世纪初美国儿童保护运动的一个被忽视的遗产:证据法和程序的变革破坏了普通法对儿童作证的限制。研究十九世纪证据法现代化的学者认为,交叉质证的兴起使得普通法中的证人回避规则消亡。然而,对儿童证词限制的削弱需要另一种或更多的解释,因为交叉质证并没有消除对儿童可靠性的担忧。我认为,儿童证人法律变革的推动力是 19 世纪的一系列儿童保护法,这些法律的实施通常要求儿童作证。本文对进步时代纽约州的案例研究揭示了证据法和程序如何适应实体法对儿童证据的要求:改革者立法规定儿童案件中普通法宣誓要求的例外情况,推动审判法院更新审查儿童证人能力的方法,并扩大了州政府将儿童作为重要证人拘留的权力。这些改革促进了执法目的的实现,但并没有解决关于儿童证词可靠性风险和为儿童福祉作证的成本的持久争论。
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Witnesses for the State: Children and the Making of Modern Evidence Law
This article identifies an overlooked legacy of the child protection movement in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth-century U.S.: transformations in evidence law and procedure that undermined common-law restrictions on children's testimony. Scholarship on the nineteenth-century modernization of evidence law argues that the rise of cross-examination allowed for the demise of common-law witness disqualification rules. The erosion of restrictions on children's testimony, however, requires an alternative or additional explanation, because cross-examination did not allay fears about children's reliability. The driving force for changes in the law governing child witnesses, I argue, was the slate of nineteenth-century child protection laws whose enforcement typically required children's testimony. The case study of Progressive-Era New York, presented here, reveals how evidence law and procedure adapted to substantive law's demand for children's evidence: reformers legislated an exception to the common-law oath requirement in children's cases, pushed trial courts to modernize their approach to examining child witnesses’ competency, and expanded the state's power to detain children as material witnesses. Those reforms fostered the ends of law enforcement, but did not resolve enduring debates about the reliability risks of children's testimony and the costs of testifying for children's wellbeing.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
12.50%
发文量
42
期刊介绍: Law and History Review (LHR), America"s leading legal history journal, encompasses American, European, and ancient legal history issues. The journal"s purpose is to further research in the fields of the social history of law and the history of legal ideas and institutions. LHR features articles, essays, commentaries by international authorities, and reviews of important books on legal history. American Society for Legal History
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