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Three Essays on Torts

«Throughout the book, there is an attempt to articulate for the next generation of academic lawyers the sort of questions they should be asking themselves and the sort of solutions they should be trying to articulate. The intention, clearly, is not so much to educate -- although there is much to learn from these essays -- as to enthuse and inspire. Any student wanting to get 'under the bonnet' of legal policy and gain insight into the shape and purpose of 'black-letter' law will read these essays with profit and enjoyment.»

Sir Marcus Smith, Balliol College Annual Record

This book of essays champions tort scholarship that puts judges at centre stage: what they do, how they understand their role, the heterogeneous reasons they give for their decisions, and their constitutional responsibility to identify and articulate the 'living' and 'evolving' common law. Les mer

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This book of essays champions tort scholarship that puts judges at centre stage: what they do, how they understand their role, the heterogeneous reasons they give for their decisions, and their constitutional responsibility to identify and articulate the 'living' and 'evolving' common law. This is 'reflexive tort scholarship'. Reflexive tort scholars seek dialogue with Bench and Bar. Their approach is very different from the currently fashionable academic search
for 'grand theories' that descriptively assert that tort law is fundamentally 'all about one thing', a unifying idea that alone explains and justifies the whole of tort law. This book illustrates the advantages and pay-offs of the reflexive style of scholarship by showing how it illuminates key
features of tort law. The first essay contrasts the reflexive approach with the Grand Theory approach, while the second essay identifies a principle of tort law (the 'cooperative principle'), that is latent in the cases and that vindicates the value of collaborative human arrangements. Identifying this principle calls into question, in disputes between commercial parties, the reasoning used to support one of the most entrenched lines of authority in tort law - that based on the famous case of
Hedley Byrne v Heller. The final essay deploys the reflexive method to argue that the iconic 'but-for' test of factual causation is inadequate and narrower than the concept actually utilized in the cases. Application of the method also prompts a reassessment of the 'scope of duty' concept and of the
appropriate characterisation of the much-discussed decision in SAAMCO. These essays, based on the 2018 Clarendon Law Lectures given at Oxford University, clearly demonstrate the value of scholarship that 'takes the judges seriously'.

Detaljer

Forlag
Oxford University Press
Innbinding
Innbundet
Språk
Engelsk
ISBN
9780192893734
Utgivelsesår
2021
Format
25 x 17 cm

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«Throughout the book, there is an attempt to articulate for the next generation of academic lawyers the sort of questions they should be asking themselves and the sort of solutions they should be trying to articulate. The intention, clearly, is not so much to educate -- although there is much to learn from these essays -- as to enthuse and inspire. Any student wanting to get 'under the bonnet' of legal policy and gain insight into the shape and purpose of 'black-letter' law will read these essays with profit and enjoyment.»

Sir Marcus Smith, Balliol College Annual Record

«Stapleton argues her case in a concise and readable manner, providing the practitioner with considerable food for thought.»

Roisin O'Dubhlaoidh, Law Society Gazette

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