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  1. Home /
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  3. Vol 53, No 4: Special Issue: Tort Law

Vol 53, No 4: Special Issue: Tort Law

Published: 2016-09-24

Introduction

  • Editors' Note

    Brooklyn LeClair, Patrick Smith
    • PDF
  • Introduction

    Gerald B. Robertson
    • PDF

Articles

  • Reflections on the Career of Professor Lewis Klar

    Ellen Picard
    • PDF
  • Toward Tort Liability for Bad Samaritans

    Allen Linden
    • PDF
  • Apportionment of Damages for Contributory Negligence: The Causal Potency Criterion

    James Goudkamp, Lewis Klar
    • PDF
  • Multi-Party Disputes: Equities Between Concurrent Tortfeasors

    Elizabeth Adjin-Tetley
    • PDF
  • Contribution Between Negligent Tortfeasors and Unjust Enrichment: An Outline of a Solution to the "No Benefit to B" Issue

    David Cheifetz
    • PDF
  • Do We Really Need the Anns Test for Duty of Care in Negligence?

    Joost Blom
    • PDF
  • Misusing the "No Duty" Doctrine in Tort Decisions: Following the Restatement (Third) of Torts Would Yield Better Decisions

    Stephen D. Sugarman
    • PDF
  • Prenatal Harm and the Duty of Care

    Erin L. Nelson
    • PDF
  • Unique Public Duties of Care: Judicial Activism in the Supreme Court of Canada

    Bruce Feldthusen
    • PDF
  • To Serve and Protect Whom? Proximity in Cases of Police Failure to Protect

    Erika Chamberlain
    • PDF
  • Theorizing the Institutional Tortfeasor

    Margaret Isabel Hall
    • PDF
  • The Rise and Fall of Plaintiff-Friendly Causation

    Vaughan Black
    • PDF
  • Tate & Lyle : Pure Economic Loss and the Modern Tort of Public Nuisance

    J. W. Neyers, Andrew Botterell
    • PDF

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The Alberta Law Review (ALR) is a student-run publication whose primary purpose is to enhance discourse on Canadian legal issues. Founded in 1955, the ALR is published by the Alberta Law Review Society, an organization consisting of law students at the University of Alberta and the University of Calgary. Built upon the hard work of student editors at both law faculties, the ALR is published every quarter and has roughly 1,000 pages per volume. 

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