Altres autors/es

Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (Espanya)

Data de publicació

2012-12



Resum

In this paper I argue that Coleman's mixed conception of corrective justice is subject to three important objections. First, it does not offer an explanation of the normative structure of tort law. The values of responsibility and concern for human well-being, on which Coleman grounds the practice of tort law, are not enough to justify its bilateral structure. Moreover, I suggest that the mixed conception does not offer a sufficiently deep analysis of the practice that might have explanatory power. Second, the mixed conception cannot account for all cases of strict liability. Coleman's argument reconstructs strict liability for risky activities as part of the fault principle. This goes against conventional wisdom, according to which strict liability regulates lawful activities, and fault liability is always imposed for wrongful actions. Finally, Coleman neglects the distributive aspect of tort law. As a result, he misses the importance of liability rules in creating the scheme of primary rights and duties that regulates private interactions. On the other hand, I offer a new account of tort law that is immune to these objections and at the same time is able to accommodate the significance of human wellbeing and individual responsibility


This work was carried out within project No. DER2010-21331-C02-02, of the Ministry of Science and Innovation (Spain)

Tipus de document

Article


Versió publicada


peer-reviewed

Llengua

Anglès

Matèries i paraules clau

Danys i perjudicis; Damages

Documents relacionats

DER2010-21331-C02-02

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MICINN//DER2010-21331-C02-02/ES/CIENCIA Y PROCESO JUDÍCIAL: PRUEBA Y ATRIBUCIÓN DE RESPONSABILIDAD/

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