As a first step to preserving the central aims of tort law, courts will need to recognize the wide variety of respectable, reliable patterns of evidence on which scientists themselves rely for drawing inferences about the toxicity of substances. Courts may also need to take further steps to address the woeful ignorance about the chemical universe. This may necessitate changes in the liability rules
Part I describes and critiques the proposals to create no-cause legal regimes applicable to all toxi...
n the early 1980s, there was great optimism about the prospects for a dawning era of toxic harms lit...
This article uses the differential diagnosis opinions to explore a pair of interrelationships. The b...
As a first step to preserving the central aims of tort law, courts will need to recognize the wide v...
Critics of the tort system have condemned courts for their alleged leniency in admitting scientific ...
The headline reads: Town clenched in suffocating grip of as- bestos: W.R. Grace & Co. closed its ve...
A number of high-profile toxic tort cases, such as silicone breast implants, have followed a familia...
This Article joins the enormous and growing body of literature examining the need for reform of toxi...
The requirements for proof of causation determine the extent to which the general public will be ex...
This Article joins the enormous and growing body of literature examining the need for reform of toxi...
Judges are removing the individual plaintiffs from many torts cases, and are instead conducting fact...
In toxic tort litigation, plaintiffs must ordinarily establish causation through the use of expert t...
Judges are the gatekeepers of evidence. Arguably, the most difficult duty for a judicial gatekeeper ...
With all of the recent advances in science and technology, humans are being exposed to many new and ...
This article argues that the dilemma described above requires change and proposes a new standard for...
Part I describes and critiques the proposals to create no-cause legal regimes applicable to all toxi...
n the early 1980s, there was great optimism about the prospects for a dawning era of toxic harms lit...
This article uses the differential diagnosis opinions to explore a pair of interrelationships. The b...
As a first step to preserving the central aims of tort law, courts will need to recognize the wide v...
Critics of the tort system have condemned courts for their alleged leniency in admitting scientific ...
The headline reads: Town clenched in suffocating grip of as- bestos: W.R. Grace & Co. closed its ve...
A number of high-profile toxic tort cases, such as silicone breast implants, have followed a familia...
This Article joins the enormous and growing body of literature examining the need for reform of toxi...
The requirements for proof of causation determine the extent to which the general public will be ex...
This Article joins the enormous and growing body of literature examining the need for reform of toxi...
Judges are removing the individual plaintiffs from many torts cases, and are instead conducting fact...
In toxic tort litigation, plaintiffs must ordinarily establish causation through the use of expert t...
Judges are the gatekeepers of evidence. Arguably, the most difficult duty for a judicial gatekeeper ...
With all of the recent advances in science and technology, humans are being exposed to many new and ...
This article argues that the dilemma described above requires change and proposes a new standard for...
Part I describes and critiques the proposals to create no-cause legal regimes applicable to all toxi...
n the early 1980s, there was great optimism about the prospects for a dawning era of toxic harms lit...
This article uses the differential diagnosis opinions to explore a pair of interrelationships. The b...