
Comparative Studies in the Development of the Law of Torts in Europe 3 Volume Hardback Set
3 Volume Set
Cambridge University Press
1st Edition
Published on 11. October 2012
Book
Paperback/Softback
792 pages
978-1-107-02311-6 (ISBN)
Description
This three-volume set contains the results of the second and final stage of an AHRC-funded project which aims to examine the nature of legal development in Western Europe since 1850, focusing on liability for fault. By bringing together experts with different disciplinary backgrounds - comparative lawyers and legal historians, all with an understanding of modern tort law in their own systems - and getting them to work collaboratively, the books produce a more nuanced comparative legal history and one which is theoretically better informed. Also available, the six-volume set containing the results of the first stage of this project.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
Worked examples or Exercises
Dimensions
Height: 248 mm
Width: 164 mm
Thickness: 58 mm
Weight
1547 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-107-02311-6 (9781107023116)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
John Bell is Professor of Law at the University of Cambridge. David Ibbetson is Regius Professor of Civil Law at the University of Cambridge.
Content
Volume 7. The Impact of Ideas on Legal Development: 1. Introduction Michael Lobban and Julia Moses; 2. Responsibility, solidarity and state regulation in classical continental social theory Roger Cotterrell; 3. Individual and social responsibility in nineteenth-century British political thought Sandra den Otter; 4. The 'welfare state' in legal and social philosophy: origins and controversies Jose Harris; 5. Continental European jurisprudence, 1850-2000 John Bell; 6. English jurisprudence and tort theory Michael Lobban; 7. The left and wrongs: Marxism, law and torts Christine Sypnowich; 8. The process of codification applied to the law of delicts Jean-Louis Halperin; 9. Codifications, commentators, and courts in tort law: the perception and application of the Civil Code and the Constitution by the German legal profession Nils Jansen; 10. The English codification debate and the role of jurists in the development of legal doctrines Alexandra Braun; 11. Regulating workplace hazards: the role of medical, scientific and technical experts in legal change P. W. J. Bartrip; 12. Expertise and the evolution of private law: the case of occupational illness in twentieth-century France Paul-Andre Rosental; 13. The notion of a European private law and a softer side to harmonisation Lucinda Miller. Volume 8. The Impact of Institutions and Professions on Legal Development: 1. Introduction Paul Mitchell; 2. England: the elaboration of fault liability Paul Mitchell; 3. England: compensation for occupational injury Peter Bartrip; 4. Scotland Elspeth Reid; 5. France Paula Giliker; 6. Germany Jens M. Scherpe; 7. The Netherlands Esther Engelhard and Ivo Giesen; 8. Spain I. Gonzalez Pacanowska and M. Garcia-Ripoll Montijano; 9. Sweden Marten Schultz. Volume 9. European Legal Development: Introduction; 1. Method and theory; 2. The place of fault in 1850 and the limits of tort law; 3. Path dependency; 4. Homogeneity in legal development: products and medical liability; 5. Doctrinal diversity: roads and neighbours; 6. Conclusion: drivers of development.