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  1.  36
    Gender Injustice in Compensating Injury to Autonomy in English and Singaporean Negligence Law.Tsachi Keren-Paz - 2019 - Feminist Legal Studies 27 (1):33-55.
    The extent to which English law remedies injury to autonomy as a stand-alone actionable damage in negligence is disputed. In this article I argue that the remedy available is not only partial and inconsistent but also gendered and discriminatory against women. I first situate the argument within the broader feminist critique of tort law as failing to appropriately remedy gendered harms, and of law more broadly as undervaluing women’s interest in reproductive autonomy. I then show by reference to English remedies (...)
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  2.  10
    Egalitarianism as Justification: Why and How Should Egalitarian Considerations Reshape the Standard of Care in Negligence Law?Tsachi Keren-Paz - 2003 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 4 (1).
    The two leading theoretical approaches to tort law — economic analysis and corrective justice — are blind to distributive considerations. Moreover, even the main distributive approaches to tort law — loss-spreading and fairness — fail to emphasize egalitarianism as a distributive consideration. This article argues that egalitarianism should influence the normative evaluation of one’s conduct as negligent or not. It first explains why normatively negligence law should be sensitive to the egalitarian concern, suggesting three different accounts for this claim, based (...)
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    Nicolette Priaulx, The Harm Paradox: Tort Law and the Unwanted Child in an Era of Choice : Routledge-Cavendish, Oxford, 2007, 224 pp, Price £25.99 , ISBN 9781844721085. [REVIEW]Tsachi Keren-Paz - 2008 - Feminist Legal Studies 16 (2):269-272.
  4.  86
    Poetic justice: Why sex-slaves should be allowed to Sue ignorant clients in conversion. [REVIEW]Tsachi Keren-Paz - 2010 - Law and Philosophy 29 (3):307-336.
    In this article I argue that clients who purchase commercial sex from forced prostitutes should be strictly liable in tort towards the sex-slaves. Such an approach is both normatively defensible and doctrinally feasible. As I have argued elsewhere, fairness and equality demand that clients compensate sex-slaves even if one refuses to acknowledge that fault is involved in purchasing sex from a prostitute who might be forced. In this article I argue that such strict liability could be grounded in the tort (...)
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