It has long been orthodoxy that punitive damages, because they are awarded in order to punish, are an anomalous remedy. So entrenched is this understanding that it has never been seriously challenged. However, even apparent truisms about the law should be questioned and, accordingly, this article offers a rival account. It contends that the deeply ingrained view that punitive damages are an aberration is a half-truth because several other remedial rules are also aimed, at least in certain circumstances, at punishment. We concentrate in this regard on the doctrine of remoteness and its attenuation where the defendant has intentionally injured the claimant, aggravated damages, the account of profits remedy and general damages. Overthrowing th...
Private redress theories of punitive damages recognize an individual victim’s right to be punitive. ...
This article reports and discusses the results of an empirical study of punitive damages, which dama...
Punitive damages are private law's most controversial remedy. This book traces the development of th...
Punitive, or exemplary damages, have been recognized in the Anglo-American common law systems for tw...
The limitations on a punitive damage award depend on the conception of punitive damages. Is it a pri...
A contemporary theory of punitive damages must answer two questions: (1) what place, if any, do puni...
The practice of using punitive damages to punish a tort defendant, in a single case brought by a sin...
his article is an attempt to acquaint the reader with contemporary legal issues surrounding punitive...
After a comparative review of the law on punitive damages in the United Kingdom, Canada and the Unit...
Court of Cassation, Joint Sessions, no. 16601/2017 has opened the doors to the recognition of puniti...
In 2001 the Supreme Court, in Cooper Industries, Inc. v. Leatherman Tool Group, Inc. suggested that,...
Punitive damages are a species of non-compensatory damages. Their principal purpose is to punish the...
This Article focuses on the concept that punitive damages can be justified as a substitute for compe...
It is a well-established principle that no court applies the penal laws of another sovereign. But wh...
This paper questions the utility of courts continuing to award punitive damages. It argues that the...
Private redress theories of punitive damages recognize an individual victim’s right to be punitive. ...
This article reports and discusses the results of an empirical study of punitive damages, which dama...
Punitive damages are private law's most controversial remedy. This book traces the development of th...
Punitive, or exemplary damages, have been recognized in the Anglo-American common law systems for tw...
The limitations on a punitive damage award depend on the conception of punitive damages. Is it a pri...
A contemporary theory of punitive damages must answer two questions: (1) what place, if any, do puni...
The practice of using punitive damages to punish a tort defendant, in a single case brought by a sin...
his article is an attempt to acquaint the reader with contemporary legal issues surrounding punitive...
After a comparative review of the law on punitive damages in the United Kingdom, Canada and the Unit...
Court of Cassation, Joint Sessions, no. 16601/2017 has opened the doors to the recognition of puniti...
In 2001 the Supreme Court, in Cooper Industries, Inc. v. Leatherman Tool Group, Inc. suggested that,...
Punitive damages are a species of non-compensatory damages. Their principal purpose is to punish the...
This Article focuses on the concept that punitive damages can be justified as a substitute for compe...
It is a well-established principle that no court applies the penal laws of another sovereign. But wh...
This paper questions the utility of courts continuing to award punitive damages. It argues that the...
Private redress theories of punitive damages recognize an individual victim’s right to be punitive. ...
This article reports and discusses the results of an empirical study of punitive damages, which dama...
Punitive damages are private law's most controversial remedy. This book traces the development of th...