Suchergebnisse
Filter
16 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
SSRN
Lost Chance of a Better Medical Outcome: New Tort, New Type of Compensable Injury, or New Causation Rule?
In: DePaul Law Review, Forthcoming
SSRN
Justifying and Categorizing Tort Doctrines: What Is the Optimal Level of Generality?
In: UC Irvine School of Law Research Paper No. 2022-03
SSRN
The Hegemony of the Reasonable Person in Anglo- American Tort Law
In: UC Irvine School of Law Research Paper No. 35, 2022
SSRN
Hate (or Bias) Crime Laws
In: UC Irvine School of Law Research Paper No. 38, 2022
SSRN
Victim Fault and Victim Strict Responsibility in Anglo-American Tort Law
In: Journal of Tort Law, 2016
SSRN
Working paper
Discrimination Is a Comparative Injustice: A Reply to Hellman
In: Virginia Law Review Online, Vol. 102, July 2016, pp. 85-100
SSRN
Punishment and Blame for Culpable Indifference
In: Inquiry: an interdisciplinary journal of philosophy and the social sciences, Band 58, Heft 2, S. 143-167
ISSN: 1502-3923
Exploring the Relationship between Consent, Assumption of Risk, and Victim Negligence
In: Kenneth W. Simons, 'Exploring the Relationship between Consent, Assumption of Risk, and Victim Negligence' in John Oberdiek, ed., 'Philosophical Foundations of the Law of Torts', Oxford University Press, 2014, Forthcoming)
SSRN
Understanding the Topography of Moral and Criminal Law Norms
In: PHILOSOPHICAL FOUNDATIONS OF CRIMINAL LAW, R.A. Duff, Stuart P. Green, eds., Oxford University Press, 2011
SSRN
Negligence
In: Social philosophy & policy, Band 16, Heft 2, S. 52-93
ISSN: 1471-6437
Faced with the choice between creating a risk of harm and taking a precaution against that risk, should I take the precaution? Does the proper analysis of this trade-off require a maximizing, utilitarian approach? If not, how does one properly analyze the trade-off?These questions are important, for we often are uncertain about the effects of our actions. Accordingly, we often must consider whether our actions create an unreasonable risk of injury — that is, whether our actions are negligent.
Contributory Negligence: Conceptual and Normative Issues
In: The Philosophical Foundations of Tort Law, S. 461-486
SSRN
SSRN
Decoding Guilty Minds: How Jurors Attribute Knowledge and Guilt
Our personal data is everywhere and anywhere, moving across national borders in ways that defy normal expectations of how things and people travel from Point A to Point B. Yet, whereas data transits the globe without any intrinsic ties to territory, the governments that seek to access or regulate this data operate with territorial-based limits. This Article tackles the inherent tension between how governments and data operate, the jurisdictional conflicts that have emerged, and the power that has been delegated to the multinational corporations that manage our data across borders as a result. It does so through the lens of the highly contested and often conflicting approaches to the jurisdictional reach of law enforcement over data, the so-called right to be forgotten, and a range of other privacy regulations-engaging in an in-depth analysis as to how these issues are playing out across both Europe and the United States. In so doing, the Article highlights the flaws with the straightforward application of old jurisdictional rules onto the new medium of data-taking on recent scholarship on this issue. And it shines a spotlight on the unilateral rulemaking by powerful states and the powerful multinational companies that manage our data, which in turn puts private, multinational companies increasingly in control of whose rules govern and thus the substance of both privacy and speech rights on a global, or near-global, basis.
BASE