
The Tort Law Review update: Vol 27 Pt 3
The latest Part of the Tort Law Review includes the following articles: “Judicial Law-Making and the Common Law of Negligence” – Kumaralingam Amirthalingam; “Assessing Potential Liability Regimes for Autonomous Vehicle Technologies in Singapore” – Terence Yeo; and “A Longitudinal Analysis of “Obvious Risk”: The Elucidation of Principle and Process” – Andrew Clarke and John Devereux. Also in this Part is a Book Review: “Compensation Funds in Comparative Perspective”, by Thierry Vansweevelt and Britt Weyts (eds) – Reviewed by Dr Tina Popa.

The Tort Law Review update: Vol 27 Pt 2
The latest Part of the Tort Law Review includes the following articles: “Strict Liability in the Law of Defamation” – Anthony Gray; “More Valuable Than Oil: The Application of Tort Law and Equity to Data Breach Cases” – Aiden Lerch and Sophie Whittaker; “Don’t Look for Fault, Find a Remedy! Exploring Alternative Forms of Compensating Medical Injuries in Australia, New Zealand and Belgium” – Tina Popa; and “Living Dangerously: Determining Liability for Obvious Risks in Professional Sport” – Ashleigh Giles and John O’Brien. Also in this Part is a Book Review: “Landmark Cases in Defamation Law”, by David Rolph (ed) – Reviewed by Tina Popa.

The Tort Law Review update: Vol 27 Pt 1
The latest Part of the Tort Law Review includes the following articles: “Defamation Law Reform in Australia: The Multiple Publication Rule” – Anthony Gray; “The Liability of Search Engines and Tech Companies in Defamation Law” – Anthony Gray; Medical Professionals and the Erosion of the ‘Ordinary’ Practitioner Standard” – Carolyn Sappideen; and “Distinguishing Duties of Care of Sports Coaches in a UK Context” – Neil Partington.
The Tort Law Review update: Vol 26 Pt 2
The latest Part of the Tort Law Review includes Case Note: “Mental Impairment and the Objective Approach in Negligence: Spearman v Royal United Bath Hospitals” – Dr David Pearce; and the following articles: “A Corrective Justice Justification for Considering the Response of the Hypothetical Person of an ‘Ordinary Level of Susceptibility’ when Assessing Reasonable Foreseeability in Cases involving Negligently Inflicted Psychiatric Injury” – Martin Allcock; “Highway Immunity and the Victimisation of Australian Law: Fact or Fiction?” – Mark Lunney; “On Not Trespassing on Trespass: In Defence of Separate Torts of Trespass to the Person” – JA Devereux; and “Neural Interface Devices and Negligence” – Scott Kiel-Chisholm.
The Tort Law Review update: Vol 26 Pt 3
The latest Part of the Tort Law Review includes the following articles: “The Slow Death of Past Damage as an Essential Element of Negligence” – Tim Baxter; “Justification Defences under the Economic Torts” – David Goodwin; “Ignoring the Call for Law Reform: Is It Time to Expand the Scope of Protection for Personal Images Uploaded on Social Networks?” – Dr Eugenia Georgiades; and “Hard Cases Making Bad Law: The Elusive Search for a Test for Duty of Care” – Andrew Clarke and John Devereux.
The Tort Law Review update: Vol 26 Pt 1
The latest Part of the Tort Law Review includes the following articles: “Are the Torts of Trespass to the Person Obsolete? Part 2: Continued Evolution” – Dr Christine Beuermann; “Punitive Damages: Time for Re-examination” – Anthony Gray; and “Defamation and the Misuse of Private Information: A Comparative Analysis” – Sarah Gale.
The Tort Law Review update: Vol 25 Pt 3
The latest Part of the Tort Law Review includes the following articles: “Are the Torts of Trespass to the Person Obsolete? Part 1: Historical Development” – Dr Christine Beuermann; “Negligence, Discretion and the Liability of Municipalities for Building Regulation: The Case for Increased Deference” – Jonathan de Vries; “The Brave New World of Psychiatric Injury in Canada” – Dr Peter Handford; and “Challenges in the Evolution of the Doctrine of Non-delegable Duty” – Aaron Yoong.
The Tort Law Review update: Vol 25 Pt 1
The latest Part of the Tort Law Review includes the following articles: “The John G Fleming Lecture: The ebbs and flows of tort law – reflections on a half century of tort law” – Professor Emeritus Lewis Klar QC; and “Practitioner perspectives on continuing legal challenges in mental harm and medical negligence: Time for a no-fault approach?” – Tina Popa. It also contains a Case Note: Greenway v Johnson Matthey Plc [2016] EWCA Civ 408.
The Tort Law Review update: Vol 24 Pt 3
The latest Part of the Tort Law Review includes the following articles: “Genetic risks, disclosure and foreseeable harm: An unanswered question after ABC v St George’s Healthcare” – Michael Fay; “Contribution rights between tortfeasors – what is the ‘same damage’?” – Victoria Stace; and “The King can still do no wrong: A critical perspective on the Crown’s private law duty of care in Canada” – Jasmine van Schouwen.