攻击性侵权行为

Q3 Social Sciences Journal of Tort Law Pub Date : 2023-07-25 DOI:10.1515/jtl-2023-0017
K. Abraham, G. White
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要三种已确立的侵权行为要求被告的行为具有“攻击性”或“高度攻击性”才能提起诉讼:攻击性殴打、公开披露真实的私人事实和侵入隐居。尽管将这些“冒犯性”侵权行为联系在一起的原因以前还没有得到承认,但这篇文章表明,它们占据了侵权责任的一个子类别,具有连贯性、洞察力和有用性。侵权行为在不同的时代和意义上因不同的原因而发展,但这三种侵权行为都基于同一原则:个人自主不仅涉及不可侵犯的身体空间,还涉及不可侵害的私人和信息空间。这些侵权行为的可诉不法行为取决于文化背景,因为随着文化条件的变化,什么是冒犯行为可能会有所不同。这些侵权行为的典型受害者(或观察者)必须有“你怎么敢?”的反应,才能满足侵权行为的冒犯性因素。这就是将这三种表面上不同的侵权行为联系在一起的原因,并有理由将其理解为对不同形式的不可侵犯空间的侵犯的保护,这是每个人自主的核心特征。
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The Offensiveness Torts
Abstract Three established torts require the defendant’s behavior to be “offensive” or “highly offensive” in order to be actionable: offensive battery, public disclosure of true private facts, and intrusion on seclusion. Although what links these “offensiveness” torts together has not been recognized before, this Article demonstrates that they occupy a sub-category of tort liability that is coherent, insight-generating, and useful. The torts developed at different times and in a sense for different reasons, but all three rest on the same principle: the idea that individual autonomy involves not only inviolable bodily space, but also inviolable private and informational space. What counts as actionable wrongdoing for these torts depends on the cultural context, because what is considered offensive conduct may vary, as cultural conditions change. The typical victim (or observer) of one of these torts must plausibly have the reaction “How dare you?” for the offensiveness element of the tort to be satisfied. That is what links these three superficially disparate torts together, and warrants understanding them together, as protections against invasions of the different forms of inviolable space that are a core feature of every individual’s autonomy.
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来源期刊
Journal of Tort Law
Journal of Tort Law Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
期刊介绍: The Journal of Tort Law aims to be the premier publisher of original articles about tort law. JTL is committed to methodological pluralism. The only peer-reviewed academic journal in the U.S. devoted to tort law, the Journal of Tort Law publishes cutting-edge scholarship in tort theory and jurisprudence from a range of interdisciplinary perspectives: comparative, doctrinal, economic, empirical, historical, philosophical, and policy-oriented. Founded by Jules Coleman (Yale) and some of the world''s most prominent tort scholars from the Harvard, Fordham, NYU, Yale, and University of Haifa law faculties, the journal is the premier source for original articles about tort law and jurisprudence.
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