General information can be found at the Expert Witness Institute and the Academy of Experts as well as within the Civil Procedure Rules.
It is interesting to note that despite being employed (usually but not always) by one side, the expert must remain impartial and his duty is to the court.
In our case the expert witness would be an expert in planning and scheduling and be able to analyse what happened (the forensic bit) and then write an opinion. When writing such an opinion one must remember that the expert is likely to have to appear in court (unless the dispute is settled) and be cross-examined possibly over a period of several days, depending on the size and complexity of the dispute, on his ability, experience and authority to express such opinion, as well as be cross-examined on what he may have actually said in the report.
David
Member for
20 years
Member for20 years
Submitted by Marcio Sampaio on Wed, 2006-01-18 07:11
To assist with major claims reports and contract analysis.
Extensive experience in Retrospective claims, Critical Path Method (CPM), EOT Claims, Time / Delay Analysis, and preparation of Expert Witness reports is essential to be considered for this role.
Have general planning and scheduling experience on large projects.
Kind regards,
Marcio Eduardo
Rio de Janeiro - Brazil
Member for
19 years 10 months
Member for19 years11 months
Submitted by Norzul Ibrahim on Wed, 2006-01-18 03:58
Member for
22 years 9 monthsRE: Forensic Planning
Rahul,
General information can be found at the Expert Witness Institute and the Academy of Experts as well as within the Civil Procedure Rules.
It is interesting to note that despite being employed (usually but not always) by one side, the expert must remain impartial and his duty is to the court.
In our case the expert witness would be an expert in planning and scheduling and be able to analyse what happened (the forensic bit) and then write an opinion. When writing such an opinion one must remember that the expert is likely to have to appear in court (unless the dispute is settled) and be cross-examined possibly over a period of several days, depending on the size and complexity of the dispute, on his ability, experience and authority to express such opinion, as well as be cross-examined on what he may have actually said in the report.
David
Member for
20 yearsRE: Forensic Planning
See what do a FORENSIC PLANNER job requires:
To assist with major claims reports and contract analysis.
Extensive experience in Retrospective claims, Critical Path Method (CPM), EOT Claims, Time / Delay Analysis, and preparation of Expert Witness reports is essential to be considered for this role.
Have general planning and scheduling experience on large projects.
Kind regards,
Marcio Eduardo
Rio de Janeiro - Brazil
Member for
19 years 10 monthsRE: Forensic Planning
Dear Rahul,
If possible, can yu briefly describe (in point form) your job description.
Thanks
norzul