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    The Fifth Edition embodies the authors’ collective wisdom from teaching the text over many years and incorporates numerous substantive and pedagogical changes. New notes introduce the principal cases succinctly and clearly. These notes orient readers to the topics at hand and illuminate related puzzles and controversies. They both assist students in understanding the cases that follow and serve to spur careful analysis and robust classroom discussion. Many new headings and subheadings have also been added. These, too, are intended to facilitate understanding by clearly indicating how various issues fit together within the larger topic. The revision includes over 50 new cases, squibs, and other materials. These updates reflect both developments in traditional fields of tort liability and new phenomena such as the rise of online platforms where products are now sold and commerce is carried on. Some of these new cases show courts grappling with questions of gendered and racialized wrongs in ways that they would not have done even a decade ago. Since the Fourth Edition, many provisions of the Second Restatement (of Torts, Agency, or other fields of law) have been superseded or supplemented by corresponding provisions of the Third Restatement. Moreover, many states have adopted pattern jury instructions that succinctly outline the elements of various claims and defenses. These new materials provide clear guidance regarding the current scope and contours of numerous claims and defenses. There are also important organizational changes and deletions. To name just a few: several chapters have been reorganized to address the rise of classical accident law and to clarify how modern tort law develops from it, to update and expand upon limitations on punitive damages, and to clarify the elements of battery and the defenses to battery. Furthermore, the casebook has been shortened and its materials have been focused on those topics addressed in current first-year torts classes. Lastly, this edition expands the book’s treatment of an emerging area of law: public nuisance. While public nuisance originally landed in the United States along with the rest of the English common law, it owes its contemporary prominence in mass tort litigation to the tobacco suits of the 1990’s. In the wake of the stunning success of the tobacco litigation, ambitious public nuisance claims have proliferated to encompass contemporary social problems such as the public health scourge of lead paint contamination, greenhouse gases, and opioids. This important legal field is comprehensively addressed in the portion of the casebook discussing mechanisms of recovery for increasingly common situations in which many people are put at risk, and many ultimately hurt, by the same tortious conduct.

  • Lewis Sargentich, Liberal Legality: A Unified Theory of Our Law (2018).

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    In his new book, Lewis D. Sargentich shows how two different kinds of legal argument - rule-based reasoning and reasoning based on principles and policies - share a surprising kinship and serve the same aspiration. He starts with the study of the rule of law in life, a condition of law that serves liberty - here called liberal legality. In pursuit of liberal legality, courts work to uphold people's legal entitlements and to confer evenhanded legal justice. Judges try to achieve the control of reason in law, which is manifest in law's coherence, and to avoid forms of arbitrariness, such as personal moral judgment. Sargentich offers a unified theory of the diverse ways of doing law, and shows that they all arise from the same root, which is a commitment to liberal legality.

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    Included throughout the book are cases that are useful on issues of substantive law, which also serve as excellent vehicles for an inquiry into process.

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    The general thesis of this Note is that the overbreadth doctrine is a principled response to the systematic failure of other methods of adjudication to protect first amendment rights adequately. The Note will proceed largely by examining alternatives to scrutiny for overbreadth. The first part will consider theoretical arguments for the as applied and overbreadth methods, and general guidelines for the employment of overbreadth reasoning. The second part will examine the method of rehabilitating overbroad statutes by excising the invalid applications as they arise, and will sketch intrinsic limitations of case by case adjudication as a means of securing the guaranties of the first amendment. In the third part, the Note will consider other methods for remedying statutory overbreadth by excising classes of unconstitutional applications - through the articulation of general rules of first amendment privilege or through the restrictive construction of expansive statutory language. In the last two parts the Note will examine the main competing technique of facial review - interest-balancing - and will consider further guidelines for affirmative use of the overbreadth doctrine.