ABSTRACT

The book explores, from a comparative and inter-disciplinary perspective, the relationship between fundamental rights and private law in Europe, a debate usually referred to as Drittwirkung or ‘horizontal effect of fundamental rights’. It discusses the different models of ‘horizontal effect’ and the impact that fundamental rights may have in shaping tort law, especially the position of child tortfeasors. The book concentrates on several European jurisdictions, namely France, Italy, Germany, Portugal, Sweden, Finland, and England and Wales. At a crossroad between human rights and European private law, this study draws insights from several legal fields (international, European, tort, constitutional and child law), sociology, psychology, and feminist studies. It also considers policy implications and advances proposals which would ensure the optimisation of the effect, and maximisation of the effectiveness, of fundamental rights in tort law, and more generally in private law. This book departs from traditional legal doctrines and offers a more pragmatic, comprehensive and just legal analysis of the role of fundamental rights in private law. It will be of interest to undergraduate and postgraduate students, academics, practitioners, policy-makers and activists with an interest in human rights, tort law, comparative law, children’s rights and European private law.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

part |100 pages

Part I

chapter |31 pages

The Horizontal Effect of Fundamental Rights

Theories and Models

chapter |23 pages

Tort law

Aims, Functions and Evolution

chapter |44 pages

The Horizontal Effect of Fundamental Rights and Tort Law

What about the Tortfeasor?32

part |113 pages

Part II

chapter |24 pages

The Fundamental Rights of Children

International, European and National Perspectives

chapter |45 pages

Children's Torts

European National Legal Solutions

chapter |36 pages

Children's Tortious Liability in Europe

Comparison, Critique and Proposals

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion