Description
In five fascinating chapters, they cover understudied areas of tort law, such as liability for nonphysical harm-including lawsuits for defamation, privacy, emotional distress, sexual harassment, and the hacking of confidential information-and aspects of tort litigation that have now disappeared, such as the prohibition against ""interested"" parties testifying in civil actions or the intentional infliction of temporal damage without justification. What emerges is a picture of the complicated legal dance American judges performed to cloak their decisions to make at times radical changes in tort law in response to social transformations. When confronting established tort doctrines under pressure from emerging social changes, they found ways to preserve at least the appearance of doctrinal continuity.
About the Author
Kenneth S. Abraham and G. Edward White both hold the position of David and Mary Harrison Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of Virginia School of Law and have written twenty-two award-winning books between them, including most recently The Forms and Functions of Tort Law and Law in American History: Volume Three, 1920-2000, respectively.
Reviews
This timely, lucid, and compelling book offers fresh and insightful treatments of important topics in tort law and law more generally, demonstrating at a granular level the phenomenon of law as a semi-autonomous institution."- John C.P. Goldberg, Harvard Law School, coauthor of Recognizing Wrongs
"Abraham and White present as powerful an argument as possible for a distinctively lawyers' logic in the management of social change. This book makes readers stop and think anew about the role of law in a changing world and will appeal to anyone interested in figuring out a path out of our present predicaments. An important intervention in the field"- John Fabian Witt, Yale Law School, author of The Accidental Republic: Crippled Workingmen, Destitute Widows, and the Remaking of American Law
Book Information
ISBN 9780813947143
Author Kenneth S. Abraham
Format Hardback
Page Count 288
Imprint University of Virginia Press
Publisher University of Virginia Press
Weight(grams) 540g