Jennifer S. Bard / October 2015

Several of Dean Bard’s articles were cited:

  • “Oh Yes, I Remember it Well”: Why the Inherent Unreliability of Human Memory Makes Brain Imaging Technology a Poor Measure of Truth-Telling in the Courtroom (2012), http://ssrn.com/abstract=1813425, in Mark W. Bennett, Unspiring the Witness Memory and Demeanor Trap: What Every Judge and Juror Needs to Know about Cognitive Psychology and Witness Credibility, 4 Am. U. L. Rev. 1331 (August, 2015)
  • Re-Arranging Deck Chairs on the Titanic: Why the Incarceration of Individuals with Serious Mental Illness Violates Public Health, Ethical, and Constitutional Principles and Therefore Cannot Be Made Right by Piecemeal Changes to the Insanity Defense, 5 Hous. J. Health L. and Pol’y1, 37-40 (2005), in Rabia Belt, When God Demands Blood: Unusual Minds and the Troubled Juridical Ties of Religion, Madness, and Culpability, 69 U. Miami L. Rev. 755 (2015).

 


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