TY - GEN AB - Tort law is the body of law governing negligence, intentional misconduct, and other wrongful acts for which civil actions can be brought. The conventional wisdom is that the rules, concepts, and structures of tort law are neutral and unbiased, free of considerations of gender and race.In The Measure of Injury, Martha Chamallas and Jennifer Wriggins prove that tort law is anything but gender and race neutral. Drawing on an in-depth analysis of case law ranging from the Jim Crow South to the 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund, the authors demonstrate that women and minorities have been under-compensated in tort law and that traditional biases have resurfaced in updated forms to perpetuate patterns of disparate recovery based on race and gender. Grappling with tort theory, the intricacies of legal doctrine and the practical effects of legal rules, The Measure of Injury is a unique treatise on torts that uncovers the public and cultural dimensions of this always-controversial domain of private law. AU - Chamallas, Martha, AU - Wriggins, Jennifer B., CN - KF1257 DO - 10.18574/nyu/9780814716762.001.0001 DO - doi ID - 1480311 JF - New York University Press Backlist eBook-Package 2000-2013 KW - Personal injuries KW - Race discrimination KW - Sex discrimination KW - Torts KW - LAW / Torts KW - 911. KW - Chamallas. KW - Compensation. KW - Crow. KW - Drawing. KW - Fund. KW - Injury. KW - Jennifer. KW - Martha. KW - Measure. KW - South. KW - Victim. KW - Wriggins. KW - analysis. KW - anything. KW - authors. KW - based. KW - been. KW - biases. KW - case. KW - demonstrate. KW - disparate. KW - forms. KW - from. KW - gender. KW - have. KW - in-depth. KW - minorities. KW - neutral. KW - patterns. KW - perpetuate. KW - prove. KW - race. KW - ranging. KW - recovery. KW - resurfaced. KW - that. KW - tort. KW - traditional. KW - under-compensated. KW - updated. KW - women. LA - eng LA - In English. LK - https://univsouthin.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9780814790069 N2 - Tort law is the body of law governing negligence, intentional misconduct, and other wrongful acts for which civil actions can be brought. The conventional wisdom is that the rules, concepts, and structures of tort law are neutral and unbiased, free of considerations of gender and race.In The Measure of Injury, Martha Chamallas and Jennifer Wriggins prove that tort law is anything but gender and race neutral. Drawing on an in-depth analysis of case law ranging from the Jim Crow South to the 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund, the authors demonstrate that women and minorities have been under-compensated in tort law and that traditional biases have resurfaced in updated forms to perpetuate patterns of disparate recovery based on race and gender. Grappling with tort theory, the intricacies of legal doctrine and the practical effects of legal rules, The Measure of Injury is a unique treatise on torts that uncovers the public and cultural dimensions of this always-controversial domain of private law. SN - 9780814790069 T1 - The Measure of Injury :Race, Gender, and Tort Law / TI - The Measure of Injury :Race, Gender, and Tort Law / UR - https://univsouthin.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9780814790069 ER -