This article compares Grotius’s treatments of liability for wrongdoing in natural law and the law of Holland to emphasise the conceptual centrality of fault in both, and places Grotius’s analyses in their historical context by tracing the treatment of strict liability in those intellectual traditions upon which he drew. It focuses in particular on the formulation of obligations quasi ex maleficio to show how the absence of fault rendered the obligation something other than delictual
It is generally accepted that the two major delictual actions derived from Roman law (the actio legi...
The article traces the problem of extraterritorial obligations in the early history of ideas, spanni...
The borrower’s liability, as stated in article 7A:1781 section 1 of the Dutch Civil Code, differs fr...
This article focuses on Grotius’s treatment of obligations arising from wrongdoing in his Inleidinge...
This article provides a new interpretation of Grotius’s conception of natural law. I argue that all ...
AbstractHugo Grotius’s account of sovereign power in De iure belli ac pacis occupies a contested pla...
The possible Stoic origins of the natural rights and natural law theories of the Dutch jurist Hugo G...
This article reconstructs Jacob van Heemskerck's second voyage to the East Indies and his capture of...
In the law of torts (or “civil liability”), a person can be held liable in certain circumstances eve...
After analyzing Grotius’ formulation of the state of nature and natural law, social contract and ...
The injured party’s own conduct contributing to the damage suffered has been a bar to the recovery o...
The injured party’s own conduct contributing to the damage suffered has been a bar to the recovery o...
This essay chapter analyses the working methods of the Dutch jurist Hugo Grotius (1583-1645), partic...
This article expounds the role played by Hugo Grotius in marginalizing positive duties for the prote...
In 1604-1605 Hugo Grotius wrote De iure praedae, a commentary on the law of booty and prize and a fi...
It is generally accepted that the two major delictual actions derived from Roman law (the actio legi...
The article traces the problem of extraterritorial obligations in the early history of ideas, spanni...
The borrower’s liability, as stated in article 7A:1781 section 1 of the Dutch Civil Code, differs fr...
This article focuses on Grotius’s treatment of obligations arising from wrongdoing in his Inleidinge...
This article provides a new interpretation of Grotius’s conception of natural law. I argue that all ...
AbstractHugo Grotius’s account of sovereign power in De iure belli ac pacis occupies a contested pla...
The possible Stoic origins of the natural rights and natural law theories of the Dutch jurist Hugo G...
This article reconstructs Jacob van Heemskerck's second voyage to the East Indies and his capture of...
In the law of torts (or “civil liability”), a person can be held liable in certain circumstances eve...
After analyzing Grotius’ formulation of the state of nature and natural law, social contract and ...
The injured party’s own conduct contributing to the damage suffered has been a bar to the recovery o...
The injured party’s own conduct contributing to the damage suffered has been a bar to the recovery o...
This essay chapter analyses the working methods of the Dutch jurist Hugo Grotius (1583-1645), partic...
This article expounds the role played by Hugo Grotius in marginalizing positive duties for the prote...
In 1604-1605 Hugo Grotius wrote De iure praedae, a commentary on the law of booty and prize and a fi...
It is generally accepted that the two major delictual actions derived from Roman law (the actio legi...
The article traces the problem of extraterritorial obligations in the early history of ideas, spanni...
The borrower’s liability, as stated in article 7A:1781 section 1 of the Dutch Civil Code, differs fr...