Are “self-inflicted” harms actionable? Courts increasingly have allowed victims to identify other (typically unrelated) parties that may share responsibility for such injuries. Moreover, insofar as judges now also permit lawsuits against closely related parties, they arguably have expanded what it means for a harm to qualify as self-inflicted. Taking these various doctrinal developments to an illogical extreme, this Article asks whether we should just let victims bring tort claims against themselves, understanding that the victims’ own liability insurers represent the intended targets. That this idea is not as crazy as it sounds suggests the extent to which tort law has become unhinged
This Article critiques the use of the tort liability system to resolve claims for personal injury an...
This article argues that private law, specifically tort law, should adopt a notion of a �cause� that...
Torts scholars hold different views on why tort law shifts costs from plaintiffs to defendants. Some...
Are “self-inflicted” harms actionable? Courts increasingly have allowed victims to identify other (t...
This article examines negligent infliction of emotional distress, one of the most controversial and ...
Tort regimes are founded upon a number of different theories of social justice. In this article, the...
The modern legislative approach to tort reform has been a piecemeal process of altering single rules...
This Article considers the possibility of imposing liability in torts for a wrongfully created risk ...
The right to defend oneself has traditionally been heavily protected by courts in all scenarios. How...
This article uses the example of mass products torts to test the traditional principle that requires...
In order to succeed in a tort suit under negligence per se, a victim must be of the class of persons...
This article addresses the treatment of suicide victims under tort law fault analysis in an effort t...
The Article systematically looks at domestic violence as a torts issue and also critiques how tort t...
This article explores the manner in which emotional harm to a plaintiff is treated differently under...
This Article examines the civil liability of actors who encourage others to behave badly, thereby ca...
This Article critiques the use of the tort liability system to resolve claims for personal injury an...
This article argues that private law, specifically tort law, should adopt a notion of a �cause� that...
Torts scholars hold different views on why tort law shifts costs from plaintiffs to defendants. Some...
Are “self-inflicted” harms actionable? Courts increasingly have allowed victims to identify other (t...
This article examines negligent infliction of emotional distress, one of the most controversial and ...
Tort regimes are founded upon a number of different theories of social justice. In this article, the...
The modern legislative approach to tort reform has been a piecemeal process of altering single rules...
This Article considers the possibility of imposing liability in torts for a wrongfully created risk ...
The right to defend oneself has traditionally been heavily protected by courts in all scenarios. How...
This article uses the example of mass products torts to test the traditional principle that requires...
In order to succeed in a tort suit under negligence per se, a victim must be of the class of persons...
This article addresses the treatment of suicide victims under tort law fault analysis in an effort t...
The Article systematically looks at domestic violence as a torts issue and also critiques how tort t...
This article explores the manner in which emotional harm to a plaintiff is treated differently under...
This Article examines the civil liability of actors who encourage others to behave badly, thereby ca...
This Article critiques the use of the tort liability system to resolve claims for personal injury an...
This article argues that private law, specifically tort law, should adopt a notion of a �cause� that...
Torts scholars hold different views on why tort law shifts costs from plaintiffs to defendants. Some...