Prima Facie: “Comfort Women,” North Korean Defectors, and Testimony as Evidence
[LIVE WEBCAST- Register for YouTube and Zoom Link]

Monday, March 29, 2021
6:00 PM EDT

Eyewitness testimony has long been regarded as powerful evidence, particularly in the legal context but also in other disciplines. Oral accounts of victims and witnesses provide potent and vivid pictures of events and circumstances that we otherwise might have little knowledge of. Yet since the 1960s social scientists have expressed serious concerns about the reliability of testimony. Multiple studies have shown that biases, unconscious memory distortions and time affect accurate recall. But what do we do when testimony makes up the majority of the evidence we have? How do experts in disciplines as diverse as the law, history and anthropology control for the problems associated with testimonial evidence to arrive at accurate, truthful accounts upon which we can rely? How do we counter the use and abuse of testimony by states who use it to create their own narratives?

The Center for Korean Legal Studies at Columbia Law School welcomes Alexis Dudden (University of Connecticut) and Sandra Fahy (Sophia University) in conversation with Center Director Jeong-Ho Roh (Columbia Law School) on the strengths and weaknesses of testimonial evidence in the context of the “comfort women” and North Korean defectors.

Co-sponsors:
Columbia University Center for Korean Research
Columbia Law School Society for Korean Legal Studies


7:00 AM Korea Standard and Japan Standard Time (Tuesday, March 30, 2021)


Sign in to Google to save your progress. Learn more
Email *
Name *
Affiliation *
Questions for Speakers (please provide in advance)
Submit
Clear form
Never submit passwords through Google Forms.
reCAPTCHA
This content is neither created nor endorsed by Google. Report Abuse - Terms of Service - Privacy Policy