Emmanuel Voyiakis
Private Law and the Value of Choice
Emmanuel Voyiakis
Private Law and the Value of Choice
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Voyiakis argues that private law aims to articulate acceptable principles as to when our institutions can hold agents accountable for their choices.
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Voyiakis argues that private law aims to articulate acceptable principles as to when our institutions can hold agents accountable for their choices.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Law and Practical Reason
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 158mm x 233mm x 14mm
- Gewicht: 430g
- ISBN-13: 9781509929740
- ISBN-10: 1509929746
- Artikelnr.: 57085198
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Law and Practical Reason
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 158mm x 233mm x 14mm
- Gewicht: 430g
- ISBN-13: 9781509929740
- ISBN-10: 1509929746
- Artikelnr.: 57085198
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Emmanuel Voyiakis
1. Private Law and the Burden of Repair I. Original Burdens and Burdens of
Repair II. A 'Direct' Account of the Burden of Repair III. The Significance
of Wrongfulness IV. Repair Without Wrongfulness or Corrective Justice 2.
Responsibility, but the Right Kind I. Substantive and Attributive
Responsibility II. Private Law Principles as Allocations of Substantive
Responsibilities III. Some Implications of the Attributive/Substantive
Divide IV. A Progress Report 3. Choice and Responsibility I. The Value of
Choice and the Asymmetry between Benefits and Burdens II. Making a Choice
vs having a Choice III. Two Sets of Objections IV. From the Value-of-choice
Account to Models of Private Law 4. Protection Against the Burden of Repair
I. Why Protection? II. Protection as a 'Bail Out' and as a Condition of
Responsibility III. Protection as a Condition of Responsibility: A Preview
IV. Working Examples and Variations V. The Protection Principle VI.
Comparing Notes: Other Accounts of Contributory Negligence VII. Protection
and the 'Background Conditions' of Choice 5. Avoidability I. Exercise of
Care as an Objection to Liability II. Rylands v Fletcher and Doing Things
on One's Own Terms III. Limited Capacities and the Standard of Care IV.
Negligence Liability and the UK SARAH Act 2015 V. Conclusion 6. Contracts
and the Social Structure I. The Classical Story and Its Limitations:
Scanlon's EL and EF Principles II. A Structure-sensitive Alternative: The
EFS Principle III. Three Objections IV. Contract Doctrine in the Light of
the EFS Principle V. 'Fair Terms', Justice, and Opportunity 7. Vicarious
Liability I. Participation and Placement II. The Significance of Placement
III. Participation and Attribution IV. An Illustration: Vicarious Liability
for the Use of Cars V. Vicarious Liability as Protection VI. Liability for
Protection vs Direct Liability VII. Conclusion
Repair II. A 'Direct' Account of the Burden of Repair III. The Significance
of Wrongfulness IV. Repair Without Wrongfulness or Corrective Justice 2.
Responsibility, but the Right Kind I. Substantive and Attributive
Responsibility II. Private Law Principles as Allocations of Substantive
Responsibilities III. Some Implications of the Attributive/Substantive
Divide IV. A Progress Report 3. Choice and Responsibility I. The Value of
Choice and the Asymmetry between Benefits and Burdens II. Making a Choice
vs having a Choice III. Two Sets of Objections IV. From the Value-of-choice
Account to Models of Private Law 4. Protection Against the Burden of Repair
I. Why Protection? II. Protection as a 'Bail Out' and as a Condition of
Responsibility III. Protection as a Condition of Responsibility: A Preview
IV. Working Examples and Variations V. The Protection Principle VI.
Comparing Notes: Other Accounts of Contributory Negligence VII. Protection
and the 'Background Conditions' of Choice 5. Avoidability I. Exercise of
Care as an Objection to Liability II. Rylands v Fletcher and Doing Things
on One's Own Terms III. Limited Capacities and the Standard of Care IV.
Negligence Liability and the UK SARAH Act 2015 V. Conclusion 6. Contracts
and the Social Structure I. The Classical Story and Its Limitations:
Scanlon's EL and EF Principles II. A Structure-sensitive Alternative: The
EFS Principle III. Three Objections IV. Contract Doctrine in the Light of
the EFS Principle V. 'Fair Terms', Justice, and Opportunity 7. Vicarious
Liability I. Participation and Placement II. The Significance of Placement
III. Participation and Attribution IV. An Illustration: Vicarious Liability
for the Use of Cars V. Vicarious Liability as Protection VI. Liability for
Protection vs Direct Liability VII. Conclusion
1. Private Law and the Burden of Repair I. Original Burdens and Burdens of
Repair II. A 'Direct' Account of the Burden of Repair III. The Significance
of Wrongfulness IV. Repair Without Wrongfulness or Corrective Justice 2.
Responsibility, but the Right Kind I. Substantive and Attributive
Responsibility II. Private Law Principles as Allocations of Substantive
Responsibilities III. Some Implications of the Attributive/Substantive
Divide IV. A Progress Report 3. Choice and Responsibility I. The Value of
Choice and the Asymmetry between Benefits and Burdens II. Making a Choice
vs having a Choice III. Two Sets of Objections IV. From the Value-of-choice
Account to Models of Private Law 4. Protection Against the Burden of Repair
I. Why Protection? II. Protection as a 'Bail Out' and as a Condition of
Responsibility III. Protection as a Condition of Responsibility: A Preview
IV. Working Examples and Variations V. The Protection Principle VI.
Comparing Notes: Other Accounts of Contributory Negligence VII. Protection
and the 'Background Conditions' of Choice 5. Avoidability I. Exercise of
Care as an Objection to Liability II. Rylands v Fletcher and Doing Things
on One's Own Terms III. Limited Capacities and the Standard of Care IV.
Negligence Liability and the UK SARAH Act 2015 V. Conclusion 6. Contracts
and the Social Structure I. The Classical Story and Its Limitations:
Scanlon's EL and EF Principles II. A Structure-sensitive Alternative: The
EFS Principle III. Three Objections IV. Contract Doctrine in the Light of
the EFS Principle V. 'Fair Terms', Justice, and Opportunity 7. Vicarious
Liability I. Participation and Placement II. The Significance of Placement
III. Participation and Attribution IV. An Illustration: Vicarious Liability
for the Use of Cars V. Vicarious Liability as Protection VI. Liability for
Protection vs Direct Liability VII. Conclusion
Repair II. A 'Direct' Account of the Burden of Repair III. The Significance
of Wrongfulness IV. Repair Without Wrongfulness or Corrective Justice 2.
Responsibility, but the Right Kind I. Substantive and Attributive
Responsibility II. Private Law Principles as Allocations of Substantive
Responsibilities III. Some Implications of the Attributive/Substantive
Divide IV. A Progress Report 3. Choice and Responsibility I. The Value of
Choice and the Asymmetry between Benefits and Burdens II. Making a Choice
vs having a Choice III. Two Sets of Objections IV. From the Value-of-choice
Account to Models of Private Law 4. Protection Against the Burden of Repair
I. Why Protection? II. Protection as a 'Bail Out' and as a Condition of
Responsibility III. Protection as a Condition of Responsibility: A Preview
IV. Working Examples and Variations V. The Protection Principle VI.
Comparing Notes: Other Accounts of Contributory Negligence VII. Protection
and the 'Background Conditions' of Choice 5. Avoidability I. Exercise of
Care as an Objection to Liability II. Rylands v Fletcher and Doing Things
on One's Own Terms III. Limited Capacities and the Standard of Care IV.
Negligence Liability and the UK SARAH Act 2015 V. Conclusion 6. Contracts
and the Social Structure I. The Classical Story and Its Limitations:
Scanlon's EL and EF Principles II. A Structure-sensitive Alternative: The
EFS Principle III. Three Objections IV. Contract Doctrine in the Light of
the EFS Principle V. 'Fair Terms', Justice, and Opportunity 7. Vicarious
Liability I. Participation and Placement II. The Significance of Placement
III. Participation and Attribution IV. An Illustration: Vicarious Liability
for the Use of Cars V. Vicarious Liability as Protection VI. Liability for
Protection vs Direct Liability VII. Conclusion