Feminist Perspectives on Tort Law

Feminist Perspectives on Tort Law

Feminist Perspectives on Tort Law

Feminist Perspectives on Tort Law

eBook

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Overview

Feminist Perspectives on Tort Law offers a distinctly feminist approach to key topics in tort law. Ten original essays written by feminist legal scholars from the UK, US, Canada and Australia encompass a range of ways of thinking about women, tort law and feminism. The collection provides a fresh and original analysis of issues of long-standing concern to feminists as well as nascent areas of concern. These include conceptions of harm, constructions of reasonableness, the duty of care, the public/private divide, sexual wrongdoing, privacy and environmental law.

Written with both scholars and students in mind, Feminist Perspectives on Tort Law is an important and timely addition to key debates in tort law..


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781136335358
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 05/23/2012
Series: Feminist Perspectives
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 248
File size: 601 KB

About the Author

Janice Richardson is a Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Law, University of Monash. She is author of: Selves, Persons, Individuals: Philosophical Perspectives on Women and Legal Obligations (Aldershot: Ashgate: 2004) and The Classic Social Contractarians: Critical Perspectives from Contemporary Feminist Philosophy and Law (Aldershot: Ashgate: 2009) and is co-editor, with Ralph Sandland, of Feminist Perspectives on Law and Theory (London: Routledge-Cavendish, 2000).

Erika Rackley is a Senior Lecturer in the Law School, Durham University, UK. She is co-author of Tort Law (OUP, 2nd edn, 2011) and co-editor of Feminist Judgments: From Theory to Practice (Hart, 2010).

Table of Contents

1: Introduction, Janice Richardson and Erika Rackley; 2: Duty of Care and Ethic of Care: Irreconcilable Difference?, Jenny Steele; 3. Endgame: On Negligence and Reparation for Harm, Nicky Priaulx; 4.Pollution and the Body Boundary: Exploring Scale, Gender and Remedy, Dayna Nadine Scott; 5. Trust in the police? Police Negligence, Invisible Immunity and Disadvantaged Claimants, Kirsty Horsey; 6. Knowledge and Power in Drug Testing and Promotion: The Adverse Effects on Women’s Health, Patricia Peppin; 7. The Standard of Care in Medical Negligence– Still Reasonably Troublesome?, José Miola; 8. The Sexual Politics of Privacy Law and Theory, Janice Richardson; 9. Tort claims for Rape: More Trials, Fewer Tribulations?, Nikki Godden; 10. Sexual Wrongdoing: Do the Remedies Reflect the Wrong?, Elizabeth Adjin-Tettey; 11. Damaging Stereotypes: the Return of ‘Hoovering as a Hobby’, Reg Graycar

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