Skip to content
Login
Contact Us
Change font size:
Small
Large
Reset
Shopping Cart
Home
About
Annual Reports
Commissioners
Past Presidents
Past Commissioners
Corporate information
Consultation
Policies
Indigenous consultation
International outreach
Kirby Cup
Law reform process
Legal internship program
Careers
FOI
Inquiries
Publications
News & Media
Links
Law reform agencies
Law reform resources
Home
»
Publications
»
Uniform Evidence Law (ALRC Report 102)
»
11. Tendency and Coincidence Evidence
11. Tendency and Coincidence Evidence
Print
In this section:
Introduction
Tendency evidence—s 97
Coincidence evidence
Issues common to ss 97 and 98
The operation of s 101
‹ Admissions which are not first-hand
up
Introduction ›
Uniform Evidence Law (ALRC Report 102)
Table of Contents:
Terms of Reference
Executive Summary
List of Recommendations
1. Introduction to the Inquiry
2. The Uniform Evidence Acts
3. Understanding the Uniform Evidence Acts
4. Competence and Compellability
5. Examination and Cross-Examination of Witnesses
6. Documentary Evidence
7. The Hearsay Rule and Section 60
8. The Hearsay Rule — First-hand and More Remote Hearsay Exceptions
9. The Opinion Rule and its Exceptions
10. Admissions
11. Tendency and Coincidence Evidence
Introduction
Tendency evidence—s 97
Coincidence evidence
Issues common to ss 97 and 98
The operation of s 101
12. The Credibility Rule and its Exceptions
13. Identification Evidence
14. Privileges: Extension to Pre-Trial Matters and Client Legal Privilege
15. Privilege: Other Privileges
16. Discretionary and Mandatory Exclusions
17. Judicial Notice
18. Comments, Warnings and Directions to the Jury
19. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Traditional Laws and Customs
20. Matters Outside the Uniform Evidence Acts