Policy Press

Diverse Voices in Tort Law

Edited by Kirsty Horsey

Published

Mar 26, 2024

Page count

278 pages

Browse the series

Diverse Voices

ISBN

978-1529231663

Dimensions

234 x 156 mm

Imprint

Bristol University Press

Published

Mar 26, 2024

Page count

278 pages

Browse the series

Diverse Voices

ISBN

978-1529231601

Dimensions

244 x 170 mm

Imprint

Bristol University Press

Published

Mar 26, 2024

Page count

278 pages

Browse the series

Diverse Voices

ISBN

978-1529231625

Dimensions

234 x 156 mm

Imprint

Bristol University Press

Published

Mar 26, 2024

Page count

278 pages

Browse the series

Diverse Voices

ISBN

978-1529231625

Dimensions

234 x 156 mm

Imprint

Bristol University Press
Diverse Voices in Tort Law

This captivating book explores uncharted territory in tort law, shedding light on underexplored viewpoints in the field.

The collection brings issues of social class, race, gender, marginalisation, vulnerability and harm into conversation with core tort law topics to encourage a more critical examination of the law and its impact on different groups of people.

Written by experts in the main areas of tort law from negligence to defamation and personal torts, chapters will:

• deepen students’ understanding of the central concepts and practices of tort law;

• uncover the power imbalances and privileges that underpin tort law decisions and their impact on lived experiences;

• amplify under-represented voices by signposting to the work and ideas of scholars that are less visible in the field.

Integrating marginalised perspectives into the curriculum and discourse, this indispensable textbook paves the way for a more inclusive and comprehensive understanding of tort law.

Chapter 9 available open access digitally under CC-BY licence.

“Bringing diverse voices and traditionally marginalised viewpoints to bear upon mainstream tort issues, this is a genuinely unique collection of essays which both advances our understanding of tort law as a mechanism of civil redress and generates new insights into the relation between law, power and disadvantage.” Joanne Conaghan, University of Bristol

“This is a refreshing collection on relevant and urgent debates in tort, from an impressive set of contributors. The thought-provoking essays demonstrate how examining tort from diverse, critical perspectives can be valuable, for both students and scholars.” James Lee, King’s College London

Kirsty Horsey is Professor of Law at the University of Kent. She has taught Tort Law and Advanced Torts across all stages of the curriculum since 2000.

1. Introduction: Why Recognising Diversity in Tort Law Matters - Kirsty Horsey

Part 1: Underexplored Ideas Within the Core of Negligence

2. Negligence and the Vulnerable Subject: Public Bodies and the Duty of Care - Nikki Godden-Rasul and C.R.G. Murray

3. The Politics of Pure Economic Loss – Craig Purshouse

4. Queering the Reasonable Person – Haim Abraham

part 2: How Negligence Norms Respond to Particular Harms

5. Reproductive Harm, Social Justice and Tort Law: Rethinking ‘Wrongful Birth’ and ‘Wrongful Life’ Claims – Julie McCandless and Kirsty Horsey

6. Coded Copper, Toxic Water. Multinational Corporations, Environmental Degradation, and Tort Law - Iain Frame

Part 3: Diverse Voices Elsewhere in Tort

7. Product Liability, Medical Devices and Harm to Women’s Bodies – Emily Jackson

8. The Tortious Response to Police Power, Misconduct and Abuse – Rita D’Alton-Harrison

9. Homosexuality, Defamatory Meaning, and Reputational Injury in English Law – Alexandros Antoniou and Dimitris Akrivos

10. Rethinking ‘Negligence’ in ‘Medical Negligence’: Can Trespass to the Person Torts Help Protect Autonomy? – Eliza Bond and Jodi Gardner

11. Image-based Sexual Abuse and Gendered Conceptions of Harm in Tort – Aislinn O’Connell