RB 54

Contents Acknowledgements Contents VII IX Introduction 1 PART ONE: The Statutory Theory of Proof and the Makingof the Centralized State .... 1. The Statutory Theory of Proof: The Construction of an Edifice 2. The Development of French Criminal Procedure and the Lawof Proof in the Late MiddleAges and the Renaissance 3. The Appearance of the Inquisitorial Procedure, Torture and the Legal Theory of Proof in Germany 4. The Statutory Theory Loses Its Grip - the System of Legal Proof Dismantling PART TWO: The Reception of the Statutory Theory of Proof inSweden 5. The Seventeenth-Century Reception of the Statutory Theory of Proof in Sweden 6. The Lawof Proof in the Swedish Legislation andJuristic Writingfrom the Lawof 1734 to the Beginning of the Nineteenth Century PART THREE: Free Evaluation of Evidence in the Nineteenth-Century Legal Literature: France, Germany, Sweden, Finland 7. France after 1789: Ulntime Conviction and theJury 8. Germany: Jury, Publicity, Orality, and the Proof 9. Sweden: ANordic Version of the Continental Liberal Procedure 10. Conclusion of Comparison: France, Germany and Sweden 11. The Emergence of Procedural Legal Literature in Finland at the End of the 1800s: ALate Reception of Free Evaluation of Evidence PART FOUR: Fromthe Legal Theory of Proof to the Free Evaluation of Evidence: the Ghange in Legal Practice 12. The Reign of Legal Proof in the Finnish Criminal Procedure Prior to the 1850s 13. The Years of Transformation: Towards Free Evaluation of Evidence 195 12 14 33 38 45 57 57 97 105 109 116 133 140 142 161 165

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