Description
Book SynopsisOver the past decades no body of law within the civil justice system has experienced greater ferment than the law of Torts. This collection comprises of scholarship from many of today's most influential contributors regarding Torts and Compensation Systems scholarship.
Trade Review' … it is rare to see conference papers morph into an instant classic of original scholarship … represents some of the best modern tort original scholarship … exquisitely written … unveil[s] a treasure trove of concepts prefiguring tort law in the ancient law.' Bimonthly Review of Law Books
' … excellent collection of essays …' Tort and Insurance Law Yearbook
Table of ContentsPart I. Tort Law in the New Millennium: Past as Prologue: 1. Tort Law through time and culture: themes of economic efficiency M. Stuart Madden; 2. Past as prelude: the legacy of five landmarks of twentieth-century injury law for the future of Torts Robert L. Rabin; Part II. Compensation and Deterrence in the Modern World: 3. Twenty-first century insurance and loss distribution in Tort Law Kenneth S. Abraham; 4. Beyond master-servant: a critique of vicarious liability Jennifer H. Arlen and W. Bentley McLeod; Part III. Duty Rules, Courts, and Torts: 5. The disintegration of duty Ernest J. Weinrib; 6. Managing the negligence concept: respect for the rule of law James A. Henderson, Jr; 7. Rebuilding the citadel: privity, causation, and freedom of contract Richard A. Epstein; 8. Controlling the future of the common law by restatement Jane Stapleton; 9. Information shields in Tort Law David G. Owen; 10. The complexity of torts: the case of punitive damages Guido Calabresi; 11. The future of proportional liability: the lessons of toxic substance causation Michael D. Green; Part IV. Torts in a Shrinking World: 12. Causation in products liability and exposure to toxic substances: a European view Federico Stella; 13. Collective rights and collective actions: examples of European and Latin American contributions Juan Carlos Henao.