In this brief comment on the very interesting paper by Blumstein, Bovbjerg and Sloan, I want to question the desirability and defensibility of their proposal to substitute contracts-for-care for the traditional damage award in an important subclass of tort cases. In doing so, I want to draw attention to the connection between one way of understanding of what it is that makes something tortious and the appropriateness of various kinds of remedies given that understanding. The thesis I advance, which I am calling connectedness or continuity between offense and remedy, is important not only to our understanding of tort law, but to our understanding of legal liability more generally
Two theories of tort liability influence modern tort law. The corrective justice theory ( CJT ) hold...
In their stimulating and valuable article, Blumstein, Bovbjerg, and Sloan offer two quite distinct p...
In this paper, I discuss Goldberg and Zipursky’s Recognizing Wrongs and argue that there is a tensio...
In this brief comment on the very interesting paper by Blumstein, Bovbjerg and Sloan, I want to ques...
The modern legislative approach to tort reform has been a piecemeal process of altering single rules...
This Article focuses on the concept that punitive damages can be justified as a substitute for compe...
Compensating for harms is the bedrock of the practice of tort law. The hypothetical ideal of making...
Those who are reforming medical malpractice law, or studying its reform, ought to attend to tort the...
This thesis seeks to justify on moral grounds the existence of tort systems. The argument is that co...
The cornerstone of tort law in our Anglo-American system of jurisprudence is based upon three genera...
Viewed in a certain light, tort law serves primarily to give injury victims a means of imposing oner...
Tort regimes are founded upon a number of different theories of social justice. In this article, the...
A contemporary theory of punitive damages must answer two questions: (1) what place, if any, do puni...
A restitutive theory of justice is a rights-based approach to criminal sanctions that views a crime ...
Potential defendants faced with the prospect of tort or tort-like damage actions can reduce their li...
Two theories of tort liability influence modern tort law. The corrective justice theory ( CJT ) hold...
In their stimulating and valuable article, Blumstein, Bovbjerg, and Sloan offer two quite distinct p...
In this paper, I discuss Goldberg and Zipursky’s Recognizing Wrongs and argue that there is a tensio...
In this brief comment on the very interesting paper by Blumstein, Bovbjerg and Sloan, I want to ques...
The modern legislative approach to tort reform has been a piecemeal process of altering single rules...
This Article focuses on the concept that punitive damages can be justified as a substitute for compe...
Compensating for harms is the bedrock of the practice of tort law. The hypothetical ideal of making...
Those who are reforming medical malpractice law, or studying its reform, ought to attend to tort the...
This thesis seeks to justify on moral grounds the existence of tort systems. The argument is that co...
The cornerstone of tort law in our Anglo-American system of jurisprudence is based upon three genera...
Viewed in a certain light, tort law serves primarily to give injury victims a means of imposing oner...
Tort regimes are founded upon a number of different theories of social justice. In this article, the...
A contemporary theory of punitive damages must answer two questions: (1) what place, if any, do puni...
A restitutive theory of justice is a rights-based approach to criminal sanctions that views a crime ...
Potential defendants faced with the prospect of tort or tort-like damage actions can reduce their li...
Two theories of tort liability influence modern tort law. The corrective justice theory ( CJT ) hold...
In their stimulating and valuable article, Blumstein, Bovbjerg, and Sloan offer two quite distinct p...
In this paper, I discuss Goldberg and Zipursky’s Recognizing Wrongs and argue that there is a tensio...