Jump to ContentJump to Main Navigation

Chapter

Corrective justice and wrongful gain

Jules L. Coleman

in Markets, Morals, and the Law

Published in print September 2002 | ISBN: 9780199253609
Published online January 2010 | e-ISBN: 9780191719783 | DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199253609.003.0008
Corrective justice and wrongful gain

Preview

This chapter makes a distinction between two questions: what grounds a victim's claim to recovery, and what justifies holding an injurer liable for the harms his conduct occasions. That these two questions are distinct can be seen from the fact that a society could permit all victims to seek compensation for all injuries (other than injuries that are self-imposed) while providing that injurers can be held liable only when their conduct is faulty or negligent. Such an arrangement might be undesirable, but that would be a normative matter, not an analytic one. In other words, it is not analytic that compensation flows from an injurer to a victim. That is tort practice, one that needs a defense. By distinguishing between the grounds and modes of recognition, the chapter tries to show how a scheme of no-fault liability can be made consistent with the demands of justice in liability.

Keywords: corrective justice; wrongful gain; liability; victims; injurers; compensation; torts; fault; Richard Posner

Chapter.  8038 words. 

Subjects: competition law

Go to Oxford Scholarship Online » abstract

full text: subscription required

How to subscribe Recommend to my Librarian

Buy this work at Oxford University Press »