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E-grāmata: Uncertainty in Comparative Law and Legal History: Known Unknowns

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  • Formāts: 346 pages
  • Sērija : Transforming Legal Histories
  • Izdošanas datums: 13-Dec-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040267318
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  • Bibliotēkām
  • Formāts: 346 pages
  • Sērija : Transforming Legal Histories
  • Izdošanas datums: 13-Dec-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040267318

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"Laws are imposed on facts. But what is the law to do when its rules for establishing facts do not-because they cannot-produce a satisfactory answer? Scenarios that raise this intractable uncertainty problem have been treated as isolated concerns, but are in fact endemic across legal systems. They can cross jurisdictional and doctrinal boundaries, have recurred throughout history, and demand creative thinking from those faced with them. This book explores the law's understandings of and responses to suchsituations from a comparative historical perspective. It investigates how the law has framed these most difficult problems of uncertainty; dealt with uncertainty's often unclear boundaries; and developed a broad range of different responses to solve or avoid it, across doctrine, time and jurisdiction. The work examines a selection of key uncertainty problems across private law as elements of a singular uncertainty issue endemic in legal systems. This analysis will be of interest to historians and comparatists, but also to doctrinal, theoretical and other scholars and practitioners. The analysis leaves us better informed and better equipped for dealing with future scenarios where uncertainty arises, including insights beyond national and doctrinal confines"--

This book investigates how the law has framed the most complex problems of uncertainty, when its rules for establishing facts cannot produce a satisfactory answer; dealt with uncertainty’s often unclear boundaries; and developed a broad range of responses to solve or avoid it, exploring these issues from a comparative historical perspective.



Laws are imposed on facts. But what is the law to do when its rules for establishing facts do not—because they cannot—produce a satisfactory answer? Scenarios that raise this intractable uncertainty problem have been treated as isolated concerns, but are in fact endemic across legal systems. They can cross jurisdictional and doctrinal boundaries, have recurred throughout history, and demand creative thinking from those faced with them. This book explores the law’s understandings of and responses to such situations from a comparative historical perspective. It investigates how the law has framed these most difficult problems of uncertainty; dealt with uncertainty’s often unclear boundaries; and developed a broad range of different responses to solve or avoid it, across doctrine, time and jurisdiction. The work examines a selection of key uncertainty problems across private law as elements of a singular uncertainty issue endemic in legal systems. This analysis will be of interest to historians and comparatists, but also to doctrinal, theoretical and other scholars and practitioners. The analysis leaves us better informed and better equipped for dealing with future scenarios where uncertainty arises, including insights beyond national and doctrinal confines.

1. Known unknowns: uncharted waters; PART 1: Life and death;
2. In the
beginning: dealing with unknowns at the start of life;
3. Commorientes:
deaths, disasters, disappearances;
4. The subtle conclusion: epistemic
uncertainty and law at the end of life; PART 2: Causation and loss;
5. Causal
uncertainty in tort law: the special case of mesothelioma;
6. Known unknowns:
loss of a chance and intractable connections;
7. Quantifying or avoiding the
unknown? Damages for future lost earnings in tortious personal injury cases;
PART 3: Meanings and intentions;
8. Contractual interpretation and ad hominem
rules of construction;
9. Unmixing intangible assets; PART 4: BROADER
PERSPECTIVES ON LAW AND UNCERTAINTY;
10. A spectrum of uncertainty;
11. Known
unknowns in Roman law: the second chapter of the lex Aquilia; PART 5:
Conclusions;
12. Known unknowns: tracing a map
Andrew J. Bell is a Lecturer in Law at the University of Bristol, UK, and a Fellow of the European Centre of Tort and Insurance Law.

Joanna McCunn is a Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of Bristol, UK.