Roland Koenigsdorff; Hermann Scherer; Anita Hasert; Stefan Hudjetz; Peter Knoll; Martin Becker; Thomas Köberle Fraunhofer Irb Stuttgart (2014) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Volker Dietzsch; Thomas Jahnke; Martin Janßen; Gerhard Koenig; Arne Mentzendorff; Ursula Simanowsky; Hans Wuttke Cornelsen Verlag GmbH (2004) Kovakantinen kirja
Sabine Both; Andreas Dierßen; Thomas Endl; David Fermer; Christina Koenig; Philipp Köster; Joachim Masannek; Frank Reifenberg Baumhaus Verlag GmbH (2006) Kovakantinen kirja
Thomas Breyer-Mayländer; Klaus W. Bramann; Ulrich E. Huse; Michaela von Koenigsmarck; Mario Lange; Hans H. Ruta Bramann Dr. Klaus-Wilhelm (2010) Kovakantinen kirja
Thomas Breyer-Mayländer; Christof Seeger; Klaus W Bramann; Ulrich E Huse; Michaela von Koenigsmarck; Mario Wambold; Ruta Bramann Dr. Klaus-Wilhelm (2014) Kovakantinen kirja
Late night comedians and journalists eagerly seized upon the case of an elderly woman who sued McDonald's when she spilled hot coffee in her lap as a prime example of frivolous litigation. But as Rustad and Koenig argue, cases such as these are an incomplete and misleading characterization of tort law. Corporations have successfully waged a public relations battle to create the impression that most lawsuits are spurious, when in fact the opposite is true: tort law plays a crucial role in protecting consumers from dangerous and sometimes life-threatening hazards. Without legal remedies, corporations would suffer no penalty for choosing profits over public health and safely.
In Defense of Tort Law is the first book to systematically examine the social, legal and policy dimensions of the tort reform debate. This insightful analysis of solid empirical data looks beyond popular myths about frivolous lawsuits, and tackles a variety of contentious issues: Should punitive damages be capped? Who is favored by tort law? Who loses, and why?
Koenig and Rustad's detailed case study analysis also reveals disturbing gender inequities in a legal system that is largely dominated by men. Because women are disproportionately injured by medical products, impermissible HMO cost cutting, medical malpractice and sexual exploitation, restrictions on the rights to recovery in these fields inevitably creates gender injustice. Engaging and up to date, In Defense of Tort Law also identifies aspects of the current law that require further elaboration, including the need for measures to combat cybercrime against consumers.