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The contemporary landscape of transnational political economy is
dominated by networks. Public and private networks, and networks
that combine public and private actors, cross borders, exert
regulatory power and their activities often harm third parties.
However, tort law as a traditional source of remediation for third
party harms appears impotent when faced with the problem of
regulating the 'society of networks'. This book, using a systems
theory framework, retraces the emergence of tort law in modernity
and highlights how two models of normative ascription - personal
responsibility and organizational liability - have come to shape
existing tort law's ambivalence towards network phenomena. This
book breaks new ground by leaving behind the national law 'frame of
reference', drawing on the conceptual promise of EU law to develop
a concept of 'network responsibility' for a network society and
lays the foundations of a tort law for the 21st century.
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