Tort Law - Strict Liability, Defamation, and Product Liability
Chapter 4: Strict Liability
Strict liability assigns responsibility for damages caused by certain activities or conditions, regardless of intent or care. It applies to abnormally dangerous activities, animal liability, and product liability. This policy promotes safety and ensures victim compensation by shifting the burden of risk to those best able to control or insure against it.
Chapter 5: Defamation
Defamation protects reputations from false and harmful statements, balancing free speech and personal rights. It encompasses libel (written) and slander (spoken) and requires proof of a false statement, publication, harm, and fault. Defenses include truth, privilege, consent, and opinion.
Chapter 6: Product Liability
Product liability addresses harm from defective or dangerous products. Defects can be manufacturing flaws, design flaws, or failures to warn. Liability theories include negligence, strict liability, and breach of warranty.
Overall Summary
Tort law addresses various harms through different mechanisms, aiming to allocate costs to those who create or control risks while providing redress to victims. Strict liability covers inherently dangerous activities, defamation protects reputations, and product liability ensures consumer safety. As technology advances, these laws must adapt to new challenges.
Published on 11 months, 1 week ago
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