ADMISSIBILITY OF EVIDENCE BASED ON FINDINGS OF NEUROSCIENCE: IMPLICATIONS FOR CRIMINAL JUSTICE IN NIGERIA

O. I. DERIK-FERDINAND

Abstract


Nigeria operates adversarial system of litigation in both civil and criminal proceedings. It therefore follows that allegation offacts can never be established without leading credible, reliable and admissible evidence. Consequently, the leading ofcompelling and admissible evidence by a qualified witness to sway the mind of the court is inevitable under the accusatorialsystem of litigation practiced in Nigeria. The strict rules of evidence are fundamentally regulated by the provisions of theNigerian Evidence Act 2011. Therefore, the broad aim of this scholarly investigation is to explore the contemporaryadvancements in the fields of neuroscience and determinism as the bases for determination of criminal responsibility. Hence,the principal objective of the scholarly appreciation is to examine the legal possibilities of using the knowledge derived fromthe scientific domains of neuroscience and determinism within the context of admissibility under the extant laws and rules ofevidence in Nigeria. The paper employs doctrinal research method as a tool to analyse how the advancements of the knowledgeindustry and the advocacy in the fields of neuroscience and determinism may be integrated into the rules and dynamics of thelaw of evidence in Nigeria.

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