Square Peg in a Round Hole: Government Contractor Battlefield Tort Liability and the Political Question Doctrine

C. Jenks
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Recent assertions of the political question doctrine by battlefield contractor defendants in tort litigation have brought new life to the doctrine while raising new questions. The lawsuits stem from incidents in both Iraq and Afghanistan and include plaintiffs ranging from local nationals suing contract interrogators and interpreters, to contract employees suing another contractor following insurgent attacks, to U.S. service members suing contractors after vehicle and airplane crashes. The lawsuits involve tort claims, which on their face do not conjure up images of a constitutional power struggle, but in at least fifteen cases thus far contractor defendants have asserted the political question doctrine as a defense. The political question doctrine addresses whether the judiciary should review government action or decisions and yet contractors are asserting the doctrine in cases where the government is not a named party and has remained conspicuously silent. This article analyzes the confused application of the political question doctrine to battlefield related contractor tort litigation and proposes a methodology to bring clarity to future decisions. Absent a more rigid analytical approach by the judiciary and a change in the government's attitude, the confusion surrounding the political question doctrine and the inconsistency of its application to the inevitable future contractor cases will only grow.
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方枘圆凿:政府承包商战场侵权责任与政治问题主义
最近战场承包商被告在侵权诉讼中对政治问题原则的主张,在提出新问题的同时,也给政治问题原则带来了新的生命。这些诉讼源于伊拉克和阿富汗的事件,原告包括当地国民起诉合同审讯员和口译员,合同雇员在叛乱分子袭击后起诉另一承包商,以及美国军人在车辆和飞机坠毁后起诉承包商。这些诉讼涉及侵权索赔,从表面上看,这并没有让人联想到宪法权力斗争的形象,但到目前为止,至少有15起案件中,承包商被告主张政治问题原则作为辩护。政治问题原则解决的是司法机构是否应该审查政府的行为或决定,然而承包商在政府没有被点名的情况下坚持这一原则,并且明显保持沉默。本文分析了政治问题原则在与战场相关的承包商侵权诉讼中的混乱应用,并提出了一种使未来判决更加清晰的方法。如果司法部门不采取更严格的分析方法,政府的态度也不改变,围绕政治问题原则的混乱,以及它在未来不可避免的承包商案件中应用的不一致,只会越来越多。
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