Items
Details
Author
Title
Private wrongs / Arthur Ripstein.
Imprint
Cambridge, Massachusetts ; London, England : Harvard University Press, 2016.
Copyright
©2016.
Description
xiv, 313 pages ; 24 cm
Formatted Contents Note
Introduction : retrieving the idea of a private wrong
What you already have, Part I : your body and property
Using what you have : misfeasance and nonfeasance
Wrongdoing for which the offender must pay : negligence
Use what is yours in a way that does not harm your neighbor : strict liability
A malicious wrong in its strict legal sense : motive and intention in tort law
What you already have, Part II : your own good name
Remedies, Part I : as if it had never happened
Remedies, Part II : before a court
Conclusion : horizontal and vertical.
What you already have, Part I : your body and property
Using what you have : misfeasance and nonfeasance
Wrongdoing for which the offender must pay : negligence
Use what is yours in a way that does not harm your neighbor : strict liability
A malicious wrong in its strict legal sense : motive and intention in tort law
What you already have, Part II : your own good name
Remedies, Part I : as if it had never happened
Remedies, Part II : before a court
Conclusion : horizontal and vertical.
Summary
"From the perspective of prominent positions in both moral philosophy and legal scholarship, tort law can seem baffling: people are made to pay damages when they are barely or not at fault, yet some serious harms go uncompensated. Many of these puzzles grow out of the assumption that the law's concern must either be to compensate losses or penalize misconduct. In private wrongs, Arthur Ripstein provides a philosophical and systematic account of the rights protected by tort law. The law of tort protects what people already have: their person, understood as bodily integrity and reputation, and property. Ripstein articulates the form of these rights, and provides a simple but compelling explanation of the sense in which the point of damages is to make it as if the wrong had never happened. He explains why this matters even though damages are at best an imperfect substitute and why enforcing private rights is consistent with the other activities of a liberal state without being reducible to them"--Publisher's information.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Location
STA
Call Number
K923 .R57 2016
Language
English
ISBN
9780674659803 (alkaline paper)
0674659805 (alkaline paper)
0674659805 (alkaline paper)
Record Appears in