Loading edition detail...
Preparing this view.
Book detail
Tort law, a fundamental building block of every legal system, features prominently in mass culture and political debates. As this pioneering anthology reveals, tort law is not simply a collection of legal rules and procedures, but a set of cultural responses to the broader problems of risk, injury, assignment of responsibility, compensation, valuation, and obligation. Examining tort law as a cultural phenomenon and a form of cultural practice, this work makes explicit comparisons of tort law across space and time, looking at the United States, Europe, and Asia in the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuries. It draws on theories and methods from law, sociology, political science, and anthropology to offer a truly interdisciplinary, pathbreaking view. Ultimately, tort law, the authors show, nests within a larger web of relationships and shared discursive conventions that organize social life.
| Publisher | Stanford University Press, Stanford Law Books |
|---|---|
| Pages | 408 |
| Search language | simple |
| ISBN_10 | 0-804-75613-9 primary |
| ISBN_10 | 0-804-75614-7 primary |
| ISBN_13 | 978-0-804-75614-3 primary |
Publication-specific alternatives linked to the same work.