The second part of the MTGEW will consist of a wide range of parallel workshops on various topics in the field of law and evidentiary reasoning. There are four official workshops, whose coordination has been entrusted by the organization of the congress to recognized specialists. Additionally, a call has been announced so that the congress attendees themselves can propose and self-manage the organization of additional workshops on other evidentiary topics, which will be added to the programme for all participants.
IMPORTANT: Workshops will not have a simultaneous translation service and may be carried out in any language. For this reason, the definitive programme will contain, for each case, the information of the language in which it will be taught.
Coordinated by Sarah Summers (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
Speakers
Federico Picinali (London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom)
Dimitrios Giannoulopoulos (Goldsmiths University of London, United Kingdom)
Sabine Gless (University of Basel, Switzerland)
Luca Marafioti (Università degli Studi Roma Tre, Italy)
Session in english
Sarah Summers
University of Zurich, Switzerland
Assistant Professor of Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure and Criminology at the University of Zurich, Switzerland. She was a member of the country section Great Britain and Northern Ireland at the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law, Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany from 2003 until 2017. Publications in the field of criminal evidence and procedure include: Fair Trials: The European Criminal Procedural Tradition and the European Court of Human Rights (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2007); The Internationalisation of Criminal Evidence: Beyond the Common Law and Civil Law Traditions (Cambridge: CUP, 2012) and Obstacles to Fairness in Criminal Proceedings: Individual Rights and Institutional Forms (Oxford: Hart, 2018) (both with John Jackson); and most recently The Limits on Punishment: Human Rights and the Sentence (forthcoming 2021). She is currently working on a monograph on Fairness as Defence Rights and on a new edition of Human Rights in Criminal Proceedings (both to be published by OUP).
Federico Picinali
London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom
Associate Professor in the LSE Law Department. He has an LLM from Yale Law School and a PhD from the University of Trento. He teaches and researches in criminal law and evidence law, with a particular interest in theoretical approaches to these subjects. He has written on the criminal standard of proof, on inferential reasoning in legal fact-finding, on statistical evidence, on improperly obtained evidence, and on self-defence, among other topics. He has published in several journals, including the Modern Law Review, Law & Philosophy, the Canadian Journal of Law & Jurisprudence, the Journal of Applied Philosophy, Criminal Law & Philosophy, the International Journal of Evidence & Proof, Jurisprudence, and Law, Probability & Risk. He is currently working on a book on intermediate criminal verdicts for the Oxford Monographs in Criminal Law and Justice Series (OUP). He lives in Sheffield with his wife, two daughters and dog, and is a keen rock climber.
Dimitrios Giannoulopoulos
Goldsmiths University of London, United Kingdom
Inaugural Professor, and Head of the Department of Law, at Goldsmiths University of London. Dimitrios has leading expertise in how human rights norms on criminal justice are applied in national jurisdictions across different legal cultures, and has published widely on suspects’ rights, evidence obtained in violation of the right to privacy and the application of ECHR jurisprudence in the domestic criminal process. His monograph on Improperly Obtained Evidence in Anglo-American and Continental Law (Oxford, Hart Publishing, 2019) offers an extensive cosmopolitan insight into the ‘exclusionary rule’ debate, taking multiple systems of law – domestic, transnational, international – as key points of reference, to expose connections (and discordance) beyond the conventional common law and civil law divide. His co-edited volume (with Prof Yvonne McDermott Rees) on Challenges to Judicial Independence in Times of Crisis is forthcoming in 2022 as part of the prestigious Proceedings of the British Academy series.
Sabine Gless
University of Basel, Switzerland
Professor of Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure at the University of Basel, Switzerland. Her research interests lie in the fields of criminal evidence and procedure and international criminal law with a focus on the interests of those affected by cross-border cooperation. More recently, she has turned her attention to the impact of digitalization on criminal justice systems and the relevance for evidence law. Sabine Gless is the principal investigator on a number of research projects, including a project on (Ro)Bots Monitoring Humans. A Digital Shift in Law and its Narratives? Recent publications include: ‘The Handling of Digital Evidence in Germany’ (together with T Wahl), in M Caianiello and A Camon, (eds), Digital Forensic Evidence, Towards Common European Standards in Antifraud Administrative and Criminal Investigations (Wolters Kluwer, 2021) 49-86; ‘AI in the Courtroom: A Comparative Analysis of Machine Evidence in Criminal Trials’ (2020) 51 Georgetown Journal of International Law 195-253; and ‘Transnational Access to Evidence, Witnesses, and Suspects’, in: DK Brown, J Iontcheva Turner and B Weisser (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Criminal Process (Oxford: OUP, 2019) 587-608.
Luca Marafioti
Università degli Studi Roma Tre, Italy
Full Professor of Criminal Procedure at the University of Roma Tre and practices longtime as lawyer in criminal litigations. He is author of numerous scientific publications, both Italian and International, focused on the right to silence of the accused, the negotiated criminal justice, the role of the Public Prosecutor in the criminal process and the system of appellate remedies, especially on inadmissibility of cassation appeal. He has been Visiting professor or researcher in foreign Institutes and Universities in Europe and America and lecturer in international conferences. Professor Marafioti is also co-director of the editorial series “Processo penale e politica criminale” and member of the editorial board of several legal journals.
Coordinated by Eduardo Demetrio Crespo (Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Spain)
Speakers
Stefano Ruggeri (Università degli Studi di Messina, Italy)
Daniel Pastor (Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina)
María Luisa Villamarín López (Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain)
Miquel Julià Pijoan (Universidad de Barcelona, Spain)
Session in Spanish
Eduardo Demetrio Crespo
Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Spain
PhD from the University of Salamanca (1997) and is Professor of Criminal Law at the University of Castilla-La Mancha (2011). He has been a Research Fellow of the Ministry of Education and Science (1994-1997), the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation (2005-2006), the Max-Planck Society (2008), the Hanseatic Institute for Advanced Studies (2010) and the Salvador de Madariaga Programme of the Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports (2016). He has carried out research stays in Germany, the UK and Italy. He was visiting professor at the Università degli Studi della Campania Luigi Vanvitelli (2018) and Honorary Professor at the San Martín de Porres University (2019). His lines of research revolve around the dogmatic and constitutional foundations of criminal law. Among his publications, the following monographs stand out: Prevención general e individualización judicial de la pena (1st ed. 1999; re-ed. 2016); La tentativa en la autoría mediata y en la actio libera in causa (1st ed. 2003; re-ed. 2020); Culpabilidad y fines de la pena: con especial referencia al pensamiento de Claus Roxin (1st ed. 2008, re-ed. 2013), Responsabilidad penal por omisión del empresario (1st ed. 2009, re-ed. 2017), Fragmentos sobre Neurociencias y Derecho penal (2017) y El Derecho penal del Estado de Derecho entre el espíritu de nuestro tiempo y la Constitución (2020). He has also directed or coordinated numerous collective works dedicated to the aforementioned fields of study. He currently works as lead reseacher and coordinating lead researcher respectively of the projects “Derecho penal y comportamiento humano” and “Crisis del Derecho penal del Estado de Derecho”.
Stefano Ruggeri
Università degli Studi di Messina, Italy
Doctor juris from the ‘Scuola Superiore di Studi Universitari e di Perfezionamento Sant’Anna’ in Pisa. He is currently a professor at the Dipartimento di Giurisprudenza of the University of Messina (Italy), where he teaches criminal procedural law, evidentiary law and European and Transnational Criminal Justice. He has been Experienced Researcher for the A. von Humboldt Foundation. He is a member of the editorial and scientific committees of various criminal justice journals, has founded and is Editor in Chief of the Collection of Legal Studies in International, Comparative and European Criminal Law from Springer International Publishing. His main areas of research include the general theory of the process, evidentiary law, European criminal justice and comparative criminal law.
Daniel Pastor
Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina
Professor of Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure at the University of Buenos Aires. Research Secretary of the Faculty of Law of the same University. He is co-director of the Institute of Neurosciences and Law of the INECO Foundation. Co-director of the Laboratory of Innovation and Artificial Intelligence of the Law School of the University of Buenos Aires. He has been a PhD researcher at the University of Cologne, as a fellow of the German Academic Exchange Service, and has been a postdoctoral researcher at the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation at the University of Munich. He is a researcher and member of the Scientific Council of the Centre for the Study of Latin American Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure at the University of Göttingen. He is the author and / or editor of more than a dozen books and about fifty works in his specialty.
María Luisa Villamarín López
Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain
Professor of Procedural Law at the Complutense University of Madrid. She has a degree and a PhD from the Complutense with an Extraordinary Award for her Degree (1998) and PhD (2002), respectively. Since the beginning of her university career, she has researched different aspects of civil and criminal proceedings, works that have been reflected in her five monographs, and in more than twenty chapters of books and scientific articles. Her work on European procedural issues stands out, such as her work on the Regulations for obtaining evidence or on the European Order for the Retention of Accounts. In order to carry out these publications, he has undertaken stays in prestigious foreign research centres such as the MPI of Freiburg and Hamburg (thanks to a DAAD scholarship), Harvard University (thanks to a scholarship from the Real Colegio Complutense), UCLA (from which she is a is research fellow; stay financed by a Del Amo Grant), Oxford and Munich. She has continuously participated in more than a dozen competitive Spanish and European research projects since joining the Procedural Law Department in 1998. She has been a member of the EJTN for two years representing the Spanish Centre for Judicial Studies. Along with her research work, she carries out teaching tasks at the UCM Law School in Bachelor's and Master's degrees, having obtained very positive evaluations in recent years and a recognition of academic excellence in 2020. In the field of neuroscience, in addition to giving lectures on the subject in various forums, she published a monograph on its application to criminal proceedings (Neuroscience and the search for truth and deception in criminal proceedings) in 2014. This work will be published in Portuguese in May 2021.
Miquel Julià Pijoan
Universidad de Barcelona, Spain
PhD in Law from the University of Barcelona, obtaining the qualification of excellent cum laude unanimously. Likewise, he has a master's degree in Criminal Law and Criminal Sciences, from the Pompeu Fabra University and the University of Barcelona, and a master's degree in Law from the Pompeu Fabra University. During his academic training, he has undertaken stays at the Università Commerciale Luigi Bocconi (Milan) and the Università degli Studi di Milano (Milan). Currently, he is a professor in the Department of Procedural Law at the University of Barcelona, teaching the degree in Law, different Master’s and postgraduate degrees. He combines his teaching and research activities with the practice of law in firms that specialize in criminal law. Among his publications, the monograph Proceso penal y (neuro) ciencia: una interacción desorientada (Marcial Pons, 2020) stands out.
Coordinated by Christian Dahlman (Lunds Universitet, Sweden)
Speakers
Marcello Di Bello (Arizona State University, United States)
Brian Hedden (Australian National University, Australia)
David A. Lagnado (University College London, Great Britain)
Silvia Bozza (Università Ca' Foscari, Italy)
Rafal Urbaniak (University of Gdansk, Poland)
Session in English
Christian Dahlman
Lunds Universitet, Sweden
Professor of law at Lund University (Sweden), holding the Samuel Pufendorf chair in Jurisprudence. He has a PhD in philosophy of law from Lund University and has been a research fellow at Cambridge University. His research is focused on the theory of legal evidence, and he is the director of the cross-disciplinary research group LEVIC – Law, Evidence and Cognition at Lund University. His recent publications include Dahlman, Stein & Tuzet Philosophical Foundations of Evidence Law, Oxford University Press, 2021, and Dahlman “Naked Statistical Evidence and Incentives for Lawful Conduct”, International Journal of Evidence and Proof, 2020. He is also the host of Öppet fall a Swedish podcast on famous legal cases.
Marcello Di Bello
Arizona State University, United States
Holds a PhD in Philosophy from Stanford University. He is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Arizona State University. He is interested in risk and decision-making, algorithmic fairness, evidence and probability and how reliance on quantitative methods pose challenges and opportunities for the criminal justice system. He was a fellow in the School of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton.
Brian Hedden
Australian National University, Australia
Associate Professor of Philosophy at the Australian National University. Previously, he has been a lecturer at the University of Sydney, a postdoctoral researcher at Oxford, and a PhD student at MIT. He works in epistemology, decision theory, ethics, and legal philosophy. He is the author of Reasons without Persons (OUP 2015) and articles in Journal of Philosophy, Mind, Ethics, and Philosophy and Public Affairs, among others. Most recently, he has written on collective action problems, probabilistic standards of proof, and statistical criteria of algorithmic fairness.
David A. Lagnado
University College London, Great Britain
Professor of Cognitive and Decision Sciences in the Department of Experimental Psychology, UCL. He has written over 100 articles, co-authored a textbook on the psychology of decision making, and has a new book on evidential reasoning: Explaining the evidence: How the mind investigates the world (2021). He has worked with US intelligence, the UK government and various legal and financial institutions, looking at methods to improve reasoning and decision making.
Silvia Bozza
Università Ca' Foscari, Italy
Associate Professor of Statistics at Ca’ Foscari University of Venice. Her research interests are focused on applied Bayesian modelling in the interface of statistics, law and science. She has written many papers in statistical, legal and scientific peer-reviewed journals, and has coauthored three monographies edited by Wiley (Data analysis in forensic science: a Bayesian decision perspective, 2010; Bayesian networks for probabilistic inference and decision analysis in forensic science, 2014; Statistics and the evaluation of evidence for forensic scientists, 2021). of the criminal process), and on Algoritmización del Derecho y la Justicia (Algorithmization of Law and Justice) stand out.
Rafal Urbaniak
University of Gdansk, Polonia
Rafal Urbaniak obtained his PhD in Philosophy from the University of Calgary. He's been a British Academy Visiting Fellow, a Trinity College Long Room Hub Visiting Fellow, and a Postdoctoral Fellow of Research Foundation Flanders. Now he is an associate professor at the University of Gdansk, running a National Science Centre project of legal probabilism. Next academic year you can find him at the Northeastern University philosophy department, where he will be a Kosciuszko Foundation Fellow. His interests lie in formal epistemology, Bayesian statistics and data analysis, and legal probabilism. He is a co-author of the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on legal probabilism.
Coordinated by Andrés Páez (Universidad de los Andes, Colombia)
Speakers
Federico Arena (Universidad Blas Pascal, Argentina)
Moa Lidén (Uppsala Universitet, Sweden)
Mauricio Duce (Universidad Diego Portales, Chile)
Adam Benforado (Kline School of Law, Drexel University, United States)
Session in English
Andrés Páez
Universidad de los Andes, Colombia
Associate Professor of the Department of Philosophy and member of the Center for Research and Training in Artificial Intelligence (CinfonIA) of the Universidad de los Andes. Since 2002 he manages the Research Group on Logic, Epistemology and Philosophy of Science (Philogica) and he is the coordinator of the recently created Latin American Network of Legal Epistemology. His recent research is focused in two large areas: legal epistemology and the philosophy of Artificial Intelligence. In the first, his publications have dealt with the epistemological problems of testimonial, expert and reputational evidence, of the standards of proof and the effects of cognitive biases in the decisions of judges. In the second, his main interest is in the interaction between humans and autonomous artificial systems, in particular, in the factors that favor our understanding of their operation and generate confidence in their decisions.
Federico Arena
Universidad Blas Pascal, Argentina
He has a degree in Law by Cordoba National University, Argentina and a European PhD in Philosophy of Law by Genoa University, Italy. He is currently Researcher and member of the Science and Law Program of the National Research Council of Argentina (Conicet). He is also Professor of Methodology of Criminal Investigation at the Law School of the Córdoba National University and Associate Professor of Philosophy of Law and Logic at Blas Pascal University, Cordoba. He has been lecturer at Bocconi University, Italy, Alberto Hurtado University, Chile and Itam, Mexico. He has taught training courses for the judiciary in Argentina, Chile and Mexico. He has edited, with Diego Moreno and Pau Luque, the book “Razonamiento jurídico y ciencias cognitivas”, Universidad Externado de Colombia, 2021 and he has coordinated the “Manual sobre los efectos de los estereotipos en la impartición de justicia”, published by the Mexican Supreme Court in 2022. He is currently working on a book about stereotypes behind norms.
Moa Lidén
Uppsala Universitet, Sweden
Member of the Faculty of Law at Uppsala University and postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Security and Crime Science at University College London. Her work focuses on cognitive biases in law, in particular, on the confirmation bias and on debiasing techniques in legal decision-making.
Mauricio Duce
Universidad Diego Portales, Chile
She is a lawyer from Diego Portales University with a master’s degree in Law from Stanford University, California. She is a tenured professor at the Faculty of Law of the U. Diego Portales, co-director of the master’s programme in Criminal Procedure and Criminal Law and director of the Procedure Reform and Litigation Program at the same university. Former Executive President of Public Space from December 2016 to November 2019. She was programme director of the Center for Justice Studies of the Americas (CEJA); representative in Chile of the Center for Justice and International Law (CEJIL); visiting professor at various universities abroad; and consultant on criminal justice reform projects and legal training at national and international level. She was an adviser to the Ministry of Justice on criminal procedure reform from 1996 to 2000. Between 1994 and 1996, she was the secretary of the technical team that drafted the bills for the Chilean criminal procedure reform. She is the author of numerous publications in Chile and abroad on criminal justice, the criminal procedure system, juvenile criminal justice and new methodologies for teaching law.
Adam Benforado
Kline School of Law, Drexel University, United States
Professor, writer, and lawyer. As a legal scholar, his principal interest is in applying insights from the mind sciences—most notably cognitive psychology—to law and legal theory. He is particularly focused on criminal justice and the welfare of children. As an undergraduate, Professor Benforado studied at Yale University and Oxford University. He received his J.D. from Harvard Law School and was a Frank Knox Fellow and Visiting Scholar with the Cambridge University Faculty of Law. He clerked for Judge Judith Rogers on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Professor Benforado also worked at Jenner & Block, LLP in Washington, D.C., where he handled trial and appellate litigation matters. He joined the Drexel University Kline School of Law as an assistant professor in 2008 and was granted tenure in 2013. He was a visiting professor at Brooklyn Law School in Spring 2013. He has published numerous scholarly articles and book chapters, and his op-eds and essays have appeared in a variety of publications including the New York Times, Washington Post, Chronicle of Higher Education, American Scholar, and Boston Review.
Discussion of F. Schauer´s book: "The Proof. Uses of Evidence in Law, Politics, and Everything Else"
Speakers
Frederick Schauer
Daniela Accatino
Christian Dahlman
Ho Hock Lai
David Lagnado
Jennifer Mnookin
Session in english
"La enseñanza de la prueba. Experiencias, enfoques y propuestas"
Coordinated by Raymundo Gama Leyva and Flavia Carbonell Bellolio
Speakers
Raymundo Gama Leyva
Flavia Carbonell Bellolio
Marina Gascón Abellán
Giovanni Tuzet
Rodrigo Coloma
Rachel Herdy
Janaina Matida
César Higa
Session in spanish
"El Monólogo de Múltiples Actores en el Proceso Penal: en busca de la sinceridad en el enfrentamiento de la prueba. Discusión en torno al libro: "Estudos críticos em direito penal e processual penal?"
Coordinated by Bernardo Dumont Pires
Speakers
Bernardo Dumont Pires
Felipe Martins Pinto
Lara Teles Fernandes
Henrique Abi-Ackel Torres
Session in portuguese
"Evidence Matters for Access to Justice"
Coordinated by Marco Segatti, Edgar Aguilera and Carlo Vittorio Giabardo
Ponents
Marco Segatti
Edgar Aguilera
Carlo Vittorio Giabardo
Carmen Vázquez Rojas
Luca Passanante
Eduardo Oteiza
Jesús Ezurmendia
Session in english and spanish
"Prueba y arbitraje"
Coordinated by Giovanni F. Priori Posada
Speakers
Giovanni F. Priori Posada
Jorge A. Rojas
Paula Costa e Silva
Santiago Pereira Campos
Session in spanish
"La función de la carga
de la prueba"
Coordinated by Eduardo Oteiza, Luca Passanante and Vítor de Paula Ramos
Speakers
Eduardo Oteiza
Luca Passanante
Vítor de Paula Ramos
Joan Picó i Junoy
Giovanni Priori Posada
Daniel Mitidiero
Session in spanish
"Perspectiva de género en el razonamiento probatorio"
Coordinated by Marianela Delgado
Speakers
Marianela Delgado
Carmen Vázquez Rojas
Flavia Carbonell Bellolio
Marcela Araya Novoa
Jordi Ferrer Beltrán
Session in spanish
"Prueba, verdad y derechos humanos"
Coordinated by Alejo Giles and Carolina Fernández Blanco
Speakers
Alejo Giles
Carolina Fernández Blanco
Ana María Ibarra Olguín
Bernardo Javier Puetaman Baquero
María Carlota Ucín
Esteban Coronel Ojeda
Session in english and spanish
"La prueba cautelar"
Coordinated by Sidney Marcos Escobar
Speakers
Sidney Marcos Escobar
María de los Ángeles Fromow Rangel
Jeffry Mora Sánchez
Fernando Allende Sánchez
Camilo Alberto Quintero Jiménez
Session in spanish
"L'onere della prova tra tradizione e innovazione: quale futuro?"
Coordinated by Paolo Biavati and Elena Zucconi Galli Fonseca
Speakers
Carolina Mancuso
Mario Golia
Marco Morotti
Chiara Imbrosciano
Marta Naselli Flores
Angela M. Felicetti
Session in italian
"Litigación y prueba"
Coordinated by René Uribe Manríquez
Speakers
René Uribe Manríquez
Nicolás Schiavo
Jeffry Mora Sánchez
Antonio Vieira
Baldomero Mendoza
José Luís Crespo
Fernando Allende
Andrés Fuchs Nissim
Session in portuguese and spanish
"Injusticia epistémica en el contexto probatorio"
Coordinated by Janaina Matida, Marcella Mascarenhas Nardelli and Rachel Herdy
Speakers
Janaina Matida
Marcella Mascarenhas Nardelli
Rachel Herdy
Clarissa Diniz Guedes
Daniele Liberatti Santos Takeuchi
Fernando Braga Damasceno
María de los Ángeles González Coulon
María Pía Molina
Migdalia Arcila-Valenzuela
Andrés Páez
Session in portuguese and spanish
"Tendencias contemporáneas sobre razonamiento probatorio en Lationoamérica"
Cancelled
"Problemas probatorios en el derecho de daños"
Coordinated by Arantxa Gutiérrez Raymondova, Jaime Oportus Maino and Maximiliano Aramburo Calle
Speakers
Arantxa Gutiérrez Raymondova
Jaime Oportus Maino
Maximiliano Aramburo Calle
Hugo Cárdenas Villareal
Liliana Otero Álvarez
Luis Guillermo Acero Gallego
Markus Finn
Session in spanish
"Nemo contra se tenetur edere in the frame of reasonably probative inference?"
Coordinated by Gina Gioia
Speakers
Gina Gioia
Massimiliano Bina
Elena D'Alessandro
Francesca Ferrari
Rita Lombardi
Salvatore Patti
Davide Turroni
Jordi Nieva-Fenoll
John Sorabji
Session in italian, english and spanish
"Razonamiento probatorio e investigación criminal"
Coordinated by Janaina Matida, Edgar Aguilera and Marianela Delgado
Speakers
Janaina Matida
Edgar Aguilera
Marianela Delgado
Rogerio Schietti
Jesús Gutiérrez
Laura Merkel
Livia Moscatelli
Liliana Muñoz
César Higa
Antonio Vieira
Jonathan Moreno
Ronald Sanabria
Ricardo Elias Puelles
Vania Boutaud
Session in english, spanish and portuguese
"Calling software and emojis to the stand: how technology is transforming witness testimony"
Coordinated by Luca Passanante
Speakers
Luca Passanante
Giacomo Pailli
Laura Ervo
Ana Rodríguez Álvarez
Session in english and spanish
"La prueba genética: el uso del ADN en Investigación criminal"
Cancelled
"La prueba en el ámbito de los procedimientos sobre accidentes de trabajo”
Coordinated by Raquel Vicente Andrés
Speakers
Raquel Vicente Andrés
María del Carmen Pérez Sibón
Cristina Vicente Notario
Carmen López
Ana Sancho
Susana Molina
Fernando Pinto
Teresa Pilar Blanco Pertegaz
Session in spanish
“Evidence & Proof: Expert Evidence and Evidential Reasoning”
Coordinated by Kyriakos N. Kotsoglou, Tony Ward and Alex Biedermann
Speakers
Kyriakos N. Kotsoglou
Tony Ward
Alex Biedermann
Carole McCartney
Paul Roberts
Gary Edmond
Session in english
"Debates probatorios en los litigios sobre salud y derechos humanos"
Coordinated by Oscar A.Cabrera and Silvia Serrano Guzmán
Speakers
Oscar A. Cabrera
Silvia Serrano Guzmán
Isabel Barbosa
Ariadna Tovar Ramírez
Session in spanish
"La presunción de inocencia en acción: teoría y práctica jurisdiccional"
Coordinated by José Luis Ramírez Ortiz
Speakers
José Luis Ramírez Ortiz
Javier Hernández García
José Manuel Ortega Lorente
Salvador Camarena Grau
Yolanda Rueda Soriano
Xermán Varela Castejón
Session in spanish
"L’istruzione probatoria nel contenzioso d’impresa”
Coordinated by Andrea Giussani and Francesca Ferrari
Speakers
Andrea Giussani
Francesca Ferrari
Angelo Dondi
Vincenzo Ansanelli
Paolo Comoglio
Roberto Poli
Session in italian and english
“Fronteras (reales e imaginarias) entre Razonamiento Probatorio y Derechos Humanos”
Coordinated by Alan Limardo
Speakers
Alan Limardo
Diego Dei Vecchi
Pablo Rovatti
Diana Veleda
Gustavo Poblete
Session in spanish
"Economic Analysis of Evidence Law"
Coordinated by Diego Papayannis and Giovanni Tuzet
Speakers
Diego Papayannis
Giovanni Tuzet
Talia Fisher
Omer Pelled
Peter Lewisch
Shay Lavie
Amit Pundik
Session in english
"El razonamiento probatorio en la formación judicial"
Coordinated by Arturo Bárcena Zubieta
Speakers
Arturo Bárcena Zubieta
Marcela Araya Novoa
Jordi Ferrer Beltrán
Javier Hernández García
Maria Thereza Rocha de Assis Moura
Session in spanish
Additional information workshops accepted
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