Dear Colleagues:
Congratulations go out to ODGer Arthur Ripstein on the publication
of his newest book
Private Wrongs with Harvard University
Press. Information about the book's contents can be found on the
attached order form. Here is how it is described thereon:
A waiter spills hot coffee on a customer. A person
walks on another person’s land. A moored boat damages a dock
during a storm. A frustrated neighbor bangs on the wall. A
reputation is ruined by a mistaken news report. Although the
details vary, the law recognizes all of these as torts,
different ways in which one person wrongs another. Tort law can
seem puzzling: sometimes people are made to pay damages when
they are barely or not at fault, while at other times serious
losses go uncompensated. In this pioneering book, Arthur
Ripstein brings coherence and unity to the baffling diversity of
tort law in an original theory that is philosophically grounded
and analytically powerful.
Ripstein shows that all torts violate the basic moral
idea that each individual is in charge of his or her own person
and property, and never in charge of another individual’s person
or property. Battery and trespass involve one person wrongly
using another’s body or things, while negligence injures others
by imposing risks to them in ways that are inconsistent with
their independence. Tort remedies aim to provide a substitute
for the right that was violated.
As Private Wrongs makes clear, tort law not only protects our
bodies and property but constitutes our entitlement to use them
as we see fit, consistent with the entitlement of others to do
the same.
Happy Reading,
--
Jason Neyers
Professor of Law
Faculty of Law
Western University
N6A 3K7
(519) 661-2111 x. 88435