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The Foundations of Restitution for Wrongs

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'Restitution for wrongs', or 'restitutionary damages', is the judicial award which compels the wrongdoer to give up to the victim the benefit obtained through the perpetration of the wrong, independently of any loss suffered by the victim.

The establishment of a civil trial in Roman law, which left compensation as the main response, and a widespread, loss-centred interpretation of the Aristotelian theory of corrective justice explain, but do not justify the difficulties encountered by modern attempts to account for restitutionary damages.

Mistakes in the classification of this institution have complicated the picture.

In part one, the topic is analysed from a comparative perspective.

Although the focus remains on English law, the German, the Italian and the Roman jurisdictions provide research data which, in part two, support the development of a theory of restitution for wrongs as corrective justice.

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Product Details
Hart Publishing
1841136476 / 9781841136479
Hardback
06/03/2007
United Kingdom
English
320 p.
24 cm
research & professional Learn More