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Gradually, the law of tort has shifted away from a strict-liability
approach to one where fault predominates. This book charts
important case law documenting this shift. It seeks to understand
how and why it occurred. Given that the Rylands v Fletcher decision
is typically seen as a prime exemplar of strict liability, it
focusses particularly on that case, as part of the historical
development of tort law. It considers the intellectual arguments
made in favour of strict liability, and for fault-based liability.
Having done so, it then focusses on particular areas of the law of
tort, including nuisance, defamation and trespass. It is somewhat
anomalous that though most would view these as examples of torts of
strict liability, fault considerations have become prominent in
their application. This presents an uneasy compromise, where torts
that are notionally strict in nature are infused with fault
considerations, often through exceptions or defences. This book
advocates for further development in the law of tort to better
reflect a primarily fault-based approach to liability, at least in
the common law. This would make the law of tort more coherent.
The scope of vicarious liability has significantly expanded since
its original conception. Today employers are being found liable for
actions of employees that they did not authorise, and never would
have authorised if asked. They are being held liable for an
employee's criminal activity. In the related strict liability field
of non-delegable duties, they are being held liable for wrongdoing
of independent contractors. Notions of strict liability have grown
increasingly isolated in the law of tort, given the exponential
growth in the tort of negligence. They require intellectual
justification. Such a justification has proven to be elusive and
largely unsatisfactory in relation to vicarious liability and to
concepts of non-delegable duty. The law of three jurisdictions
studied has now apparently embraced the 'enterprise risk' theory to
rationalise the imposition of vicarious liability. This book
subjects this theory to strong critique by arguing that it has many
weaknesses, which the courts should acknowledge. It suggests that a
rationalisation of the liability of an employer for the actions of
an employee lies in more traditional legal doctrine which would
serve to narrow the circumstances in which an employer is legally
liable for a wrong committed by an employee.
This epic novel of a wide-eyed missionary and a rebellious woman
thrust into China's Communist revolution is "an excellent read,
panoramic in scope" (Financial Times). In 1931, young English-born
missionary Jakob Kellner brings all the crusading passion of his
untried Christian faith to a China racked by famine and bloody
civil war. He burns to save the world's largest nation from
Communism. But when he is swept along on the cold, unforgiving Long
March, Jakob becomes entangled with Mei-ling, a beautiful and
fervent revolutionary. Soon, powerful new emotions challenge and
reshape his faith-and entrap him forever in the vast country's
tortured destiny. Once held hostage by Red Guards in Peking for
more than two years, author Anthony Grey traces the path of China's
Communist party from its covert inception through purge and
revolution. He crafts a portrait of China as a land of great beauty
and harshness-of triumph and tragedy-in a sweeping narrative, rich
in historical and cultural revelations.
Gradually, the law of tort has shifted away from a strict-liability
approach to one where fault predominates. This book charts
important case law documenting this shift. It seeks to understand
how and why it occurred. Given that the Rylands v Fletcher decision
is typically seen as a prime exemplar of strict liability, it
focusses particularly on that case, as part of the historical
development of tort law. It considers the intellectual arguments
made in favour of strict liability, and for fault-based liability.
Having done so, it then focusses on particular areas of the law of
tort, including nuisance, defamation and trespass. It is somewhat
anomalous that though most would view these as examples of torts of
strict liability, fault considerations have become prominent in
their application. This presents an uneasy compromise, where torts
that are notionally strict in nature are infused with fault
considerations, often through exceptions or defences. This book
advocates for further development in the law of tort to better
reflect a primarily fault-based approach to liability, at least in
the common law. This would make the law of tort more coherent.
The current rights debate in Australia is a long-standing one, in
the context of one of the few countries without an express bill of
rights. This book discussses historical aspects of rights
protection, including Diceyan concepts of parliamentary supremacy
and the rule of law, before considering historical support for
limits to the power of Parliament. The book discusses theoretical
justifications for the power of judges to declare laws inconsistent
with human rights to be invalid, including social contract theory
and modern versions of democracy. In this context, comtemporary
human rights issues are then considered. These include the recent
laws allowing groups to be outlawed based on a politician's
declaration, laws that limit the right of an accused person to jury
trial, both at the national and regional level, laws that restrict
voting rights, laws that restrict the ability of a person to work
in different regions within Australia, and laws that allow a person
to be detained based on an assessment of their future risk to
society. Deficiencies in rights protection in Australia are
identified and possible solutions suggested.
In 1997 it will be thirty years since the Sexual Offences Act of
1967 made sex between two men aged over 21 in private no longer a
crime. It also marks the seventieth birthday of Antony Grey, who
was one of the leading campaigners for homosexual law reform in the
1960s. The articles and talks reprinted in this book (together with
others published here for the first time) cover the whole span of
Grey's campaigning life, ranging from his first, anonymous, letter
to the press about homosexuality written in 1954 to his thoughts on
present-day sexual politics in the 1990s. Topics covered include
law reform, religious and social attitudes to homosexuality, sex
education, young people and sex, and the gay movement. The book
concludes with a newly-written essay reviewing the progress
achieved since the middle of this century and assessing what
remains to be done as we enter the coming one. Never afraid of
controversy, Antony Grey provides a unique summary of a pioneering
campaigner's forty years of gay activism. For over 40 years, Antony
Grey has been a leading campaigner, not only for gay rights, but
also for better laws about, and more sensible attitudes towards,
sex generally. As Secretary of the Homosexual Law Reform Society
during the 1960s, Director of the Albany Trust in the 1970s, and
later as a freelance writer and counsellor, he has worked publicly
and consistently for individual sexual emancipation and collective
common sense. Discussion includes law and morality, pornogaphy and
free speech, the Church and homosexuality, young people and
definitions of consent, sex education, gay politics from the
homophile movement to queer, and outing.
Nowadays we talk about sex incessantly -- yet we still lack a
comfortable language in which to do so. The 'polite' vocabularies
of religion, medicine, law and sociology are too formal,
value-laden and often simply boring, whilst the vernacular
Anglo-Saxon words are regarded by some as 'obscene', and are
frequently used by others in an aggressively negative, sex-hating
way. Antony Grey criticizes the various rhetorics of sexual
discussion, and points at the ways in which language often becomes
a stumbling-block to mutual understanding and happiness. He calls
for a thorough overhaul of sexual discourse, to pave the way for
greater realism.
A thrilling novel of the West's first journeys to Japan from "a
master storyteller" and theacclaimed author of Saigon and Peking
(The Kansas City Star). A fleet of ships billowing black smoke
steam past Japan's tributary islands in July 1853, setting off
panic among a people who have been sealed off from the rest of the
world for over two hundred years. Commodore Matthew Perry has
arrived, sent by the US president to open Japan to American ships
and trade-by force, if necessary. Navy lieutenant Robert Eden, an
idealistic New Englander, immediately recognizes that the colonial
intentions of his countrymen will ignite a violent conflict with
the feudal, sword-wielding samurai. Inspired to pursue peace, he
jumps ship and finds himself plunged into a world of frightful and
noble warriors, artfully exotic geishas, and a distraught populace
who view the Americans as monsters. Eden tries to bridge the divide
between two proud, unyielding cultures in the name of morality, but
he may not survive to see the lasting harmony he hopes to create.
An epic saga of love, blood, and destiny in twentieth-century
Vietnam: āThis superb novel could well be the War and
PeaceĀ of our ageā (San Francisco Chronicle). Ā Joseph
Sherman first visits Saigonāthe capital of French colonial
Cochin-Chinaāas a young man on his fatherās hunting trip in
1925. But the exotic land lures him back again and again as a
traveler, soldier, and reporter. He returns because of his
fascination for the enchanting cityāand for Lan, a mandarinās
daughter he cannot forget. Ā Over five decades Josephās
life becomes enmeshed with the political intrigues of two of
Saigonās most influential families, the French colonist Devrauxs,
and the native Trans. In this sweeping saga of tragedy and triumph,
Joseph witnesses Vietnamās turbulent, war-torn fate. He is there
when millions of coolies rise against the French, and during their
bloody last stand at Dien Bien Phu. And he sees US military
āadvisorsā fire their first shots in Americaās hopeless war
against the Communist revolution. A story of adventure, love, war,
and political power, Saigon presents an enthralling and
enlightening depiction of twentieth-century Vietnam. Ā
The scope of vicarious liability has significantly expanded since
its original conception. Today employers are being found liable for
actions of employees that they did not authorise, and never would
have authorised if asked. They are being held liable for an
employeeās criminal activity. In the related strict liability
field of non-delegable duties, they are being held liable for
wrongdoing of independent contractors. Notions of strict liability
have grown increasingly isolated in the law of tort, given the
exponential growth in the tort of negligence. They require
intellectual justification. Such a justification has proven to be
elusive and largely unsatisfactory in relation to vicarious
liability and to concepts of non-delegable duty. The law of three
jurisdictions studied has now apparently embraced the āenterprise
riskā theory to rationalise the imposition of vicarious
liability. This book subjects this theory to strong critique by
arguing that it has many weaknesses, which the courts should
acknowledge. It suggests that a rationalisation of the liability of
an employer for the actions of an employee lies in more traditional
legal doctrine which would serve to narrow the circumstances in
which an employer is legally liable for a wrong committed by an
employee.
The United States Bill of Rights was groundbreaking in providing
constitutional recognition to freedom of speech. In the past
century the Supreme Court has decided hundreds of cases concerning
free speech, providing an established system of jurisprudence to
analyze free speech cases. This book explains the development in
the US case law and compares it to developments in similar
jurisdictions such as Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom,
and Europe. Anthony Gray critiques the jurisprudence of each nation
studied, while noting some important similarities and differences
in terms of how free speech is protected in the Western world, what
causes these differences, what one system might learn from others,
and whether convergence in approach can be expected.
This book explains the historical significance and introduction of
the presumption of innocence into common law legal systems. It
explains that the presumption should be seen as reflecting notions
of moral comfort around judgment of others. Specifically, when one
is asked to make a judgment about the guilt or otherwise of a
person accused of wrongdoing, the default position should be to do
nothing. This reflects the very serious consequences of what we do
when we decide someone is guilty of wrongdoing and is not a step to
be taken lightly. Traditionally, decision makers have only taken it
when they are morally comfortable with that decision. It then
documents how legislators in a range of common law jurisdictions
have undermined the presumption of innocence, through measures such
as reverse onus provisions, allowing or requiring inferences to be
made against an accused, redefining offenses and defenses in novel
ways to minimize the burden on the prosecutor, and by dressing
proceedings as civil when they are in substance criminal. Courts
have too easily acceded to such measures, in the process permitting
accused persons to be convicted although there is reasonable doubt
as to their guilt, and where they are not guilty of sufficiently
blameworthy conduct to attract criminal sanction. It finds that the
courts must be prepared to re-assert the prime importance of the
presumption of innocence, only permitting criminal sanctions to be
imposed where they are morally certain that the accused did that of
which they have been accused, and morally comfortable that the
conduct being addressed is worthy of the kind of criminal sanction
which prosecutors seek to impose. Courts must be morally
comfortable about the finding of guilt, and the imposition of the
criminal penalty in a given case. They have lost sight of this
moral underpinning to criminal law process and substance, and it
must be regained.
This book considers the application of free speech principles in
controversial contexts discussing United States law and equivalent
law in Europe, Canada and Australia. Anthony Gray examines the
extent to which speech of public sector employees is and should be
protected. He tackles the difficult question of hate speech and the
degree to which regulation of it has been permitted, and should be
permitted. The growing controversy of speech in a university
setting is discussed along with the roles campuses play in
fostering intellectual debate which democracies depend on. Lastly,
Gray looks at free speech issues at stake in the exponential growth
of online activity and analyzes questions the of liability these
tech companies have and their role as facilitators of mass
communication, to what extent does the first amendment even apply,
and the potential of the internet to support democratic traditions.
Overall, Gray finds that in these several key areas, free speech
rights are not as strongly protected as they should be. Courts have
often bowed to decision makers balancing away free speech rights in
favor of other objectives and instead need to re-assert the
importance of free speech in these disparate contexts.
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