
We Subject Others And Are Ourselves Subjected To Risk All The Time - Risk Permeates Life. Despite The Ubiquity Of Risk And Its Imposition, Philosophers And Legal Scholars Have Devoted Little Of Their Attention To The Difficult Questions Stimulated By The Pervasiveness Of Risk. When We Impose Risk Upon Others, What Is It That We Are Doing? What Is Risking's Moral Significance? What Moral Standards Govern The Imposition Of Risk? And How Should The Law Respond To It? This Book Highlights These Important But Neglected Questions And Offers Novel Answers To Them In A Systematic Way, Constructing A Normative Framework Of Risk Imposition That Draws Upon A Wide Range Of Insights From Diverse Sources Within Philosophy And Legal Theory. Oxford Legal Philosophy Publishes The Best New Work In Philosophically-oriented Legal Theory. It Commissions And Solicits Monographs In All Branches Of The Subject, Including Works On Philosophical Issues In All Areas Of Public And Private Law, And In The National, Transnational, And International Realms; Studies Of The Nature Of Law, Legal Institutions, And Legal Reasoning; Treatments Of Problems In Political Morality As They Bear On Law; And Explorations In The Nature And Development Of Legal Philosophy Itself. The Series Represents Diverse Traditions Of Thought But Always With An Emphasis On Rigour And Originality. It Sets The Standard In Contemporary Jurisprudence.
This book investigates the moral and legal standards that govern the imposition of risk upon others in daily life. John Oberdiek, a scholar in legal philosophy, addresses the relative lack of academic focus on the pervasive nature of risk. He constructs a normative framework that synthesizes insights from diverse philosophical and legal traditions to determine the moral significance of risking and how legal systems should respond to such actions.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and legal theorists recognize this work as a significant contribution to the under-examined intersection of risk and moral philosophy. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a foundational text for those studying contemporary jurisprudence.
Page Count:
235
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191065951
ISBN-13:
9780191065958
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!