This Article critiques the use of the tort liability system to resolve claims for personal injury and argues that this system is cumbersome and fortuitous. In an effort to resolve these difficulties, the author reviews the various alternatives to the use of the tort liability system and proposes a statute under which a defendant would be given the option of offering to pay periodically the claimant\u27s net economic loss. In the alternative, the author proposes that sellers of products or services put in effect an insurance policy or product warranty binding the seller to tender within a short period the victim\u27s net economic loss, regardless of the existence of tort liability
In the area of medical malpractice, no-fault has been offered as a response to the criticisms levele...
The premise of this article is that the currently unsettled status of noneconomic damage awards offe...
In his Forward to this volume\u27s Tort Law - No-Fault Insurance Symposium, Mr. Sugarman briefly not...
The thesis of the Article is that the expansion of tort liability based on strict liability or enter...
This Article proposes two reforms designed to improve on existing mechanisms for assessing personal ...
In recent years, an increasing number of commentators have begun to express doubts about the effecti...
This, the second part of a two-part article, contrasts negative perceptions of the personal injury s...
Since the 1980s, tort damages for pain and suffering have excited hue and cry. Twenty-three states c...
In this Article, Professor O\u27Connell discusses the inadequacies behind auto insurance and the sys...
A Review of Doing Away with Personal Injury Law: New Compensation Mechanisms for Victims, Consumers...
This, the first of a two-part article, derives notions about tort law from traditional accounts of j...
article published in law reviewCompensation for non-pecuniary losses is one of the most controversia...
In this Article, the author argues that tort law generates more perverse behavior than safety and th...
In 1986 a number of prominent legal scholars embarked upon a project commissioned by the American La...
This paper reviews the existing empirical evidence on the efficacy of the tort system and alternativ...
In the area of medical malpractice, no-fault has been offered as a response to the criticisms levele...
The premise of this article is that the currently unsettled status of noneconomic damage awards offe...
In his Forward to this volume\u27s Tort Law - No-Fault Insurance Symposium, Mr. Sugarman briefly not...
The thesis of the Article is that the expansion of tort liability based on strict liability or enter...
This Article proposes two reforms designed to improve on existing mechanisms for assessing personal ...
In recent years, an increasing number of commentators have begun to express doubts about the effecti...
This, the second part of a two-part article, contrasts negative perceptions of the personal injury s...
Since the 1980s, tort damages for pain and suffering have excited hue and cry. Twenty-three states c...
In this Article, Professor O\u27Connell discusses the inadequacies behind auto insurance and the sys...
A Review of Doing Away with Personal Injury Law: New Compensation Mechanisms for Victims, Consumers...
This, the first of a two-part article, derives notions about tort law from traditional accounts of j...
article published in law reviewCompensation for non-pecuniary losses is one of the most controversia...
In this Article, the author argues that tort law generates more perverse behavior than safety and th...
In 1986 a number of prominent legal scholars embarked upon a project commissioned by the American La...
This paper reviews the existing empirical evidence on the efficacy of the tort system and alternativ...
In the area of medical malpractice, no-fault has been offered as a response to the criticisms levele...
The premise of this article is that the currently unsettled status of noneconomic damage awards offe...
In his Forward to this volume\u27s Tort Law - No-Fault Insurance Symposium, Mr. Sugarman briefly not...