[PDF.18oi] Who Pays for Car Accidents?: The Fault versus No-Fault Insurance Debate (Controversies in Public Policy)
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Who Pays for Car Accidents?: The Fault versus No-Fault Insurance Debate (Controversies in Public Policy)
Estate of Jerry J. Phillips, Stephen Chippendale
[PDF.sy28] Who Pays for Car Accidents?: The Fault versus No-Fault Insurance Debate (Controversies in Public Policy)
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| #3761929 in Books | Georgetown University Press | 2001-12-18 | Original language:English | PDF # 1 | 8.98 x.45 x6.06l,.49 | File type: PDF | 144 pages | ||2 of 4 people found the following review helpful.| Almost made me|By A Customer|want to go out and get in a fender-bender myself. We've all seen the famous Driver's Ed movies about the deadly physical and emotional consequences of auto accidents, but rarely has there been such in-depth treatment of the risk management and allocation consequences. I've read many books on insurance (and even reinsurance), but with the exception|||"A full, fair, and frank airing of the issues animating the controversy over no-fault automobile insurance and demonstrating the evenness of the debates...The civility of the authors and their grasp of the subject makes the text a pleasure to read."―Joseph
In this new volume, two lawyers debate which kind of automobile insurance is the best, no-fault or tort liability. This book presents in one place all the legal, political, historical, and financial arguments about the two types of auto insurance.
Under the fault system currently used by thirty-seven states, tort law provides that the party at fault in the accident pays the full damages of accident victims. Jerry J. Phillips favors this system, arguing that it all...
You can specify the type of files you want, for your gadget.Who Pays for Car Accidents?: The Fault versus No-Fault Insurance Debate (Controversies in Public Policy) | Estate of Jerry J. Phillips, Stephen Chippendale. I have read it a couple of times and even shared with my family members. Really good. Couldnt put it down.