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Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Law
Comparative Institutional Analysis Of Product Safety Systems In The United States And Japan: Alternative Approaches To Create Incentives For Product Safety, Hiroshi Sarumida
Comparative Institutional Analysis Of Product Safety Systems In The United States And Japan: Alternative Approaches To Create Incentives For Product Safety, Hiroshi Sarumida
Cornell International Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Individual Rationality, Hazard Warnings, And The Foundations Of Tort Law, W. Kip Viscusi
Individual Rationality, Hazard Warnings, And The Foundations Of Tort Law, W. Kip Viscusi
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
If all people were fully rational and cognizant of all the risks they faced, then they would always select an efficient level of safety in all their activities and other choices. Thus people would trade off the potential benefits of the risky behavior against the costs, including the risks to life and limb, and select the activity and product mix that best promoted their welfare. In such a world, there would not only be no need for hazard warnings, but there also would be no need for liability of any kind. Purchasers of hazardous products, for example, would always value …
The Case For A "Strong" Regulatory Compliance Defense, Richard C. Ausness
The Case For A "Strong" Regulatory Compliance Defense, Richard C. Ausness
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
Federal administrative agencies have established safety standards or licensing procedures for airplanes, motor vehicles, pesticides, drugs, medical devices, and a variety of other products. At the same time, product sellers are subject to tort liability even though their products comply with applicable federal safety standards. Product sellers maintain that compliance with federal safety standards ought to protect them from liability under state tort law and have relied upon several legal principles to support this claim. The first, and most successful, theory is federal preemption. Under this concept, Congress may expressly or impliedly assert the primacy of federal law under the …
The Case For A "Strong" Regulatory Compliance Defense, Richard C. Ausness
The Case For A "Strong" Regulatory Compliance Defense, Richard C. Ausness
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.