Practical ethics for the expert witness in ergonomics and human factors forensic cases.

Author(s)
Hess, A.K.
Year
Abstract

This chapter describes how many texts concerning the intersection of law and applied disciplines address ethical concerns in passing or do not address them at all. Ethical concerns are like skin, skin is our larges organ and the one that interacts with the world around us. However, it is simply overlooked until something goes wrong - and so it with ethics. If ethical concerns are unaddressed, they will surely emerge during forensic consultation and often with potentially disastrous results. The objective of this chapter is to alert the reader to some concerns which, if addressed appropriately, lead to the immense satisfaction of doing a job professionally and also serving society. The chapter will address the ethical questions that face the expert at the beginning of a case, followed by some questions that might arise during the data gathering and consultation state, and the chapter concludes with questions that arise during the concluding stage.

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Publication

Library number
C 45620 (In: C 45599) /83 / ITRD E840100
Source

In: Handbook of human factors in litigation, edited by Y.I. Noy & W. Karwowski, Boca Raton, FL, CRC Press, 2004, p. 4-1 - 4-11

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