Tort Liability for Human Rights Abuses

George P Fletcher author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:3rd Oct '08

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Tort Liability for Human Rights Abuses cover

Advancing a bold theory of the relevance of tort law in the fight against human rights abuses, celebrated US law professor George Fletcher here challenges the community of international lawyers to think again about how they can use the Alien Tort Statute. Beginning with an historical analysis Fletcher shows how tort and criminal law originally evolved to deal with similar problems, how tort came to be seen as primarily concerned with negligence and how the Alien Tort Statute has helped establish the importance of tort law in international cases. In a series of cases starting with Filartiga and culminating most recently in Sosa, Fletcher shows how torture cases led to the reawakening of the Alien Tort Statute, changing US law and giving legal practitioners a tool with which to assist victims of torture and other extreme human rights abuses. This leads to an examination of Agent Orange and the possible commission of war crimes in the course of its utilisation, and the theory of liability for aiding and abetting the US military and other military forces when they commit war crimes. The book concludes by looking at the cutting-edge cases in this area, particularly those involving liability for funding terrorism, and the remedies available, particularly the potential offered by the compensation chamber in the International Criminal Court.

An interesting read Journal of the Commonwealth Lawyers' Association Vol. 18 No. 1

ISBN: 9781841137940

Dimensions: 216mm x 138mm x 11mm

Weight: 288g

222 pages