Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/21956
Appears in Collections:Law and Philosophy Book Chapters and Sections
Title: Torts, Crimes and Vindication: Whose Wrong is it?
Author(s): Duff, R A
Contact Email: r.a.duff@stir.ac.uk
Editor(s): Dyson, M
Citation: Duff RA (2014) Torts, Crimes and Vindication: Whose Wrong is it?. In: Dyson M (ed.) Unravelling Tort and Crime. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 146-173. http://www.cambridge.org/gb/academic/subjects/law/private-law/unravelling-tort-and-crime
Keywords: tort law
criminal law
vindication
Issue Date: 2014
Date Deposited: 8-Jul-2015
Abstract: It is sometimes said that tort law provides for the vindication of individual rights — which raises the question of how tort law as thus understood should relate to criminal law, which is sometimes also said to be concerned with the vindication of rights. I discuss the differences between civil and criminal modes of vindication; the ways in which we might nonetheless blur the boundaries between the tort process and the criminal process; and the light that this can throw on the central core of criminal law.
Rights: This material has been published in Unravelling Tort and Crime edited by Matthew Dyson, and has been reproduced by permission of Cambridge University Press.
URL: http://www.cambridge.org/gb/academic/subjects/law/private-law/unravelling-tort-and-crime

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