This Essay exposes and analyzes a hitherto overlooked cost of tort law: its adverse effect on innovation. Tort liability for negligence, defective products, and medical malpractice is determined by reference to custom. We demonstrate that courts\u27 reliance on custom and conventional technologies as the benchmark of liability chills innovation and distorts its path. Specifically, recourse to custom taxes innovators and subsidizes replicators of conventional technologies. We explore the causes and consequences of this phenomenon and propose two possible ways to modify tort law in order to make it more welcoming to innovation
Recent appellate decisions reveal a chaotic contributory infringement doctrine that offers little di...
Technological innovation begets legal revolution. And tort law, as a creature of the common law, mak...
Intellectual property, contract, and tort laws likely have effects on levels of innovation in servic...
This Essay exposes and analyzes a hitherto overlooked cost of tort law: its adverse effect on innova...
Current academic and policy debates focus on the impact of tort reforms on physicians’ behavior and ...
This essay directly confronts a key claim underlying calls for tort reform: that current product lia...
This symposium contribution considers five recurring themes in the application of tort law to new te...
Many commentators argue that tort law is inappropriate for responding to the risks posed by emerging...
This paper considers the impact of technological innovation—and the risks arising from it—on the dev...
Product liability ideally should promote efficient levels of product safety, but misdirected liabil...
This special issue features papers culminating from a six seminar ESRC series ‘Liability versus inno...
Product liability ideally should promote efficient levels of product safety but misdirected liabilit...
The law of products liability in tort is designed to maintain a reasonable balance between the inevi...
This Article amends an important theory by Mark Grady on nondurable precaution (Grady, 1988). We pre...
The law of products liability in tort is designed to maintain a reasonable balance between the inevi...
Recent appellate decisions reveal a chaotic contributory infringement doctrine that offers little di...
Technological innovation begets legal revolution. And tort law, as a creature of the common law, mak...
Intellectual property, contract, and tort laws likely have effects on levels of innovation in servic...
This Essay exposes and analyzes a hitherto overlooked cost of tort law: its adverse effect on innova...
Current academic and policy debates focus on the impact of tort reforms on physicians’ behavior and ...
This essay directly confronts a key claim underlying calls for tort reform: that current product lia...
This symposium contribution considers five recurring themes in the application of tort law to new te...
Many commentators argue that tort law is inappropriate for responding to the risks posed by emerging...
This paper considers the impact of technological innovation—and the risks arising from it—on the dev...
Product liability ideally should promote efficient levels of product safety, but misdirected liabil...
This special issue features papers culminating from a six seminar ESRC series ‘Liability versus inno...
Product liability ideally should promote efficient levels of product safety but misdirected liabilit...
The law of products liability in tort is designed to maintain a reasonable balance between the inevi...
This Article amends an important theory by Mark Grady on nondurable precaution (Grady, 1988). We pre...
The law of products liability in tort is designed to maintain a reasonable balance between the inevi...
Recent appellate decisions reveal a chaotic contributory infringement doctrine that offers little di...
Technological innovation begets legal revolution. And tort law, as a creature of the common law, mak...
Intellectual property, contract, and tort laws likely have effects on levels of innovation in servic...