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Compensation Funds in Comparative Perspective [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 220 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x12 mm, weight: 300 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Apr-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Intersentia Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 178068942X
  • ISBN-13: 9781780689425
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 220 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x12 mm, weight: 300 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Apr-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Intersentia Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 178068942X
  • ISBN-13: 9781780689425
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Compensation funds are used in vastly different ways across jurisdictions and legal traditions. They are an alternative to traditional tort, insurance and social security structures, and change or eliminate ordinary liability rules for certain classes of victims. Compensation funds have been established to solve liability problems in the domains of traffic accidents, financial deposits, crime victim redress, industrial and environmental damage, natural disasters and healthcare damage. They are popular with lawmakers, but their undefined nature (and sometimes incoherent status) raises important legal questions that have not yet been fully answered.The way that compensation funds have developed in different jurisdictions has not always been consistent with the rest of the legal system within that jurisdiction. The contributions in this book consider the way in which these funds have been used in Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Spain and the United Kingdom. Focusing on their functions, purpose, funding and quantum of compensation, new conclusions are drawn on the objectives of compensation funds and how they differ from insurance and social security.Compensation Funds in Comparative Perspective is useful for all comparative law, liability law and insurance law scholars and practitioners seeking to understand contemporary issues in the operation of compensation funds and introduces novel ideas for future development.

Compensation funds are redress structures that compensate victims of accidents and other misfortune where tort, insurance and social security frameworks are unavailable or inapplicable. Their undefined nature raises important legal questions that have not yet been fully answered. This book contrasts and analyses both well-known and lesser known compensation funds in Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Spain, and the United Kingdom.
Acknowledgements v
List of Contributors
xi
Introduction 1(6)
Thierry Vansweevelt
Britt Weyts
1 Background
1(1)
2 The Origins and Growth of Compensation Funds
2(3)
3 Objectives of this Book and Some Key Ideas
5(2)
Belgium
7(38)
Larissa Vanhooff
1 Introduction
8(1)
2 Definition and Classification of Compensation Funds
9(2)
3 Belgian Compensation Funds
11(9)
4 Origins of Compensation Funds: Why were they Created?
20(5)
5 Key Features of Belgian Compensation Funds
25(11)
6 Assets and Drawbacks of Funds
36(6)
7 Concluding Remarks
42(3)
France and Germany
45(22)
Jonas Knetsch
1 Introduction
45(2)
2 Diversity of Compensation Funds in France and Germany
47(5)
3 Doctrinal Issues: What Exactly is a Compensation Fund?
52(4)
4 Procedural Issues: What is the Difference between a Civil Liability Action and Compensation by a Fund?
56(3)
5 Practical Issues: Are Fund Benefits Equal to Full Compensation under Tort Law?
59(3)
6 Organisational Issues: How should Compensation Funds be Coordinated with Tort Law?
62(3)
7 Conclusion
65(2)
The Netherlands
67(22)
Michael Faure
Ton Hartlief
Gerrit van Maanen
1 Compensation Funds in General
67(20)
2 Conclusion
87(2)
New Zealand
89(46)
Kim Watts
1 Introduction
90(1)
2 Scheme Overview
91(5)
3 Why was the ACC Scheme Established?
96(6)
4 How does it Operate?
102(7)
5 The Impact of ACC on New Zealand's Legal System
109(10)
6 Case Studies Demonstrating the Limits and Complexities of a Universal Scheme
119(9)
7 Dispute Resolution Issues: Recent Changes to Enable Better Access to Justice
128(2)
8 The Future of the ACC Scheme
130(5)
Spain
135(26)
Rosa M. Garcia-Teruel
1 General Overview of Compensatory Mechanisms in Spain
136(3)
2 Compensation Funds, a Solution which is not Representative of the Options Used to Compensate Victims
139(9)
3 Other Funds that are not Managed by the Consorcio De Compensacion De Seguros
148(4)
4 The Lack of Compensation Funds for Mass Accidents in Spain and the Role of Public Aids
152(6)
5 Concluding Remarks
158(3)
United Kingdom
161(28)
Ken Oliphant
1 Introduction
162(2)
2 Compensation Schemes: A Chronology
164(1)
3 Characteristics of Compensation Schemes
165(1)
4 Points of Distinction between Compensation Schemes
166(1)
5 The Main Compensation Schemes in the United Kingdom by Thematic Cluster
167(8)
6 Motor Vehicle Accidents (Uninsured and Untraced Drivers)
175(1)
7 Criminal Injuries Compensation
176(1)
8 Financial Services
177(2)
9 Agriculture
179(1)
10 Rejected Compensation Scheme Proposals
180(3)
11 Possibilities for the Future?
183(3)
12 Conclusion
186(3)
Comparative Analysis
189(26)
Thierry Vansweevelt
Britt Weyts
Larissa Vanhooff
Kim Watts
1 Introduction
190(1)
2 Operational Field of Compensation Funds
190(2)
3 Purpose and Motivation for Compensation Funds
192(6)
4 Funding of Compensation Funds
198(2)
5 Level of Compensation
200(1)
6 Effect of Compensation Funds on Other Loss Allocation Mechanisms
201(6)
7 Conclusions and the Potential for Reform
207(4)
8 The Future and Ways to Improve Existing Compensation Funds
211(4)
Index 215
Thierry Vansweevelt is a professor and former Dean of the Faculty of Law, University of Antwerp. He works in the fields of liability law, insurance and health law and for this has been awarded the Fernand Collin Prize and the Antwerp University Research Council Prize. He is an advocate at the specialist healthcare law practice Dewallens & partners and has been appointed as member of the Royal Academy for Medicine of Belgium and as member of the board of governors of the World Association of Medical Law.

Britt Weyts is a professor of law at the University of Antwerp. Her work focuses on the law of obligations and insurance law and has won the Fernand Collin Prize. She is the spokesperson of the research group on Personal Rights and Property Rights also works as an advocate at Verbist & Vanlerberghe Omega Law.