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Law and Community
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Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Intermediate Communities, For Good and Ill Chapter 3 Tort Law and Intermediate Communities - An Overview Chapter 4 An Intermediate Communitarian Perspective on Tort Law Chapter 5 Torts and Families Chapter 6 Religious Congregations Chapter 7 Torts and the Larger Community: The Limits of Legal Obligation Chapter 8 Preserving the Larger Community (or, how to avoid killing the goose that laid the golden egg) Chapter 9 Damages, the Community, and 9/11 Chapter 10 Toward a Communitarian Tort System Chapter 11 Communitarian Principles and Law

About the Author

Robert F. Cochran, Jr., is the Louis D. Brandeis Professor and director of the Institute on Law, Religion, and Ethics at the Pepperdine University School of Law. He is the author of over 35 articles and books, including Cases and Materials on the Legal Profession, Christian Perspectives on Legal Thought, and Lawyers, Clients, and Moral Responsibility. Robert M. Ackerman is professor of law and director of the Center for Dispute Resolution at Pennsylvania State University's Dickinson School of Law. He has also served as the dean of Willamette University College of Law and has written extensively in the fields of torts, dispute resolution, trial practice, and professional responsibility.

Reviews

American law is comparatively individualistic compared to other legal systems, and tort law is the heartland of that individualism. Nonetheless, Cochran and Ackerman have discovered significant concerns for community and the common good even within our tort law. By drawing these apparent anomalies to our attention, and by developing their possible implications for tort law and our legal system generally, they have made an enormous contribution. They have helped us speak again in other ways than we are used to. May their voices reverberate in many quarters! -- Robert N. Bellah A book both timely and timeless. One does not have to be a lawyer to understand the questions Professors Ackerman and Cochran raise or the clarity with which they explore possible answers. A purely individualistic view of rights and responsibilities will not suffice, the authors suggest. The reader will be caught up in-and profit immeasurably from-thinking about the authors' efforts to produce better answers than the law so far provides. -- Thomas D. Morgan, George Washington University Law and Community is a path-breaking book. Drawing on the law of torts for examples, the authors explore with authority what is virtually unknown territory in American law: the ways in which our legal system does and does not attend to the intermediate structures of civil society upon which our great democratic experiment silently depends. -- Mary Ann Glendon, Learned Hand Professor of Law, Harvard University, former U.S. Ambassador to the Holy See

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