Selected Product: | Torts and Compensation: Personal Accountability and Social Responsibility for Injury (American Casebook Series) Hardcover Edition: 3rd Author: Dan B. Dobbs, Paul T. Hayden Publisher: West Group Release Date: 1997-06 ISBN-10: 031421111X ISBN-13: 9780314211118 List Price: $76.70 Average Customer Rating: | | Black's Law Dictionary, Eighth Edition (Black's Law Dictionary (Standard Edition)) ISBN-10: 0314151990 ISBN-13: 9780314151995 List Price:$67.00 Calamari and Perillo on Contracts (Hornbook Series Student Edition) ISBN-10: 031426485X ISBN-13: 9780314264855 List Price:$75.00 Legal Method And Writing ISBN-10: 0735553750 ISBN-13: 9780735553750 List Price:$67.00 Cases and Problems on Contracts, 5th Edition (American Casebook Series) ISBN-10: 0314166610 ISBN-13: 9780314166616 List Price:$142.00 Modern Criminal Law: Cases, Comments And Questions (American Casebooks) ISBN-10: 0314159029 ISBN-13: 9780314159021 List Price:$140.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Torts and Compensation: Personal Accountability and Social Responsibility for Injury (American Casebook Series) by Dan B. Dobbs, Paul T. Hayden (ISBN-10: 031421111X, ISBN-13: 9780314211118). At this time we have not yet written a review for Torts and Compensation: Personal Accountability and Social Responsibility for Injury (American Casebook Series) by Dan B. Dobbs, Paul T. Hayden (ISBN-10: 031421111X, ISBN-13: 9780314211118). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com This book focuses primarily on personal injury torts, including common law tort solutions. Yet, most injuries in America are redressed through alternative means, such as workers' compensation, social security, or private insurance. A picture of injury law, therefore, includes those topics and they remain a part of the current edition. Although the economic tort materials provided in this book are limited core materials, they suffice to help readers recognize that tort law is not exclusively injury law, but involves much more. Good job on the content, editing and flow need a little work | Customer Rating: | | I am using this book currently in my torts class. The content is solid however the editing is poor. Grammatical errors can be found throughout the text. | Inefficient, mediocre collection of cases | Customer Rating: | As a first year law student, nobody told me about that some of the books that we are asked to read are not meant to be useful learning aids. I bought this book and did my readings faithfully and diligently for the first couple months of school. Please, do not make the same mistake that I did!
Don't use this book as your primary method to learn torts unless you enjoy wasting time and don't want a life outside of the dreary halls of your law school.
The book is incredibly inefficient. It introduces you to concepts and details of areas of tort law at a snail's pace. You'll spend 3 or 4 hours of reading and briefing cases to pick up what you could have learned in 15 minutes of reading a Casebrief, Gilbert, or Emanuel outline. The explanations between cases is mediocre, posing more questions than answers. And the book does not provide answers to the problems and hypotheticals that it asks.
As a first year law student, the professors will decieve you and tell you that you will learn more if you do all of the readings, brief the cases, and participate in the Socratic Method learning style. Big lie! In reality, volumes of scholarly pieces have been devoted to exposing the myth of the Casebook/Socratic/Langdellian method of education for the inefficient joke that it is. But your professors will ask you to be a good little law student and read your Torts and Compensation, and brief your cases.
If you make the mistake of believing them, like I did, you will find yourself studying over 50 hours a week and will only have a medicore understanding of the material.
Ignore your professors' mad rants, buy an outline book, spend 15 hours a week studying instead of 50, and have a masterful understanding of the material. Part of this strategy I outlined is ignoring this textbook. It's tailor made for the antiquated inefficiencies of the Socratic Method and all of the time wasting that goes along with it.
If your professor assigned this book to you, you probably don't have a choice and MUST buy it. If you value your time, AND want to learn torts successfully, buy a book that is keyed to this textbook and has summaries of all of the cases (in case you get called on). Look at a hornbook or a Gilbert or Emanuel outline to get a framework of Tort law. This textbook is a big waste of time. There are better, faster, more complete ways to learn torts. This book is just a detour, a weapon that first year law professors will use to make your first semester rites-of-passage as difficult as possible.
| Worst Torts book ever | Customer Rating: | | I used this book during my first year of law school and found it utterly useless. Aside from the terrible editing, the material is not all that well organized and the book is full of little "mini-cases" which present you with random little holdings of tort law. Furthermore, I found the analysis on some of the more important cases to be deficient. | gift? | Customer Rating: | | since the item that I purchased was categorised as gift, and my intent to buy it just for my friend's birthday, so I hope Amazon could offer some sort of small gift card that I could put my greetings on it before sending to my firend, thanks | The typos kind of annoy, but the book is informative | Customer Rating: | | Like many students in law school I had to read this book for my Torts class. Our professor did an excellent job with a fairly mediocre book by explaining the concepts and cases at length (and thus eliminating the need for me to go and buy supplemental materials). There are sections of the book that you can gloss over (and this is precisely what our professor had us do) unless you really need to know more about tort wars or statutes of limitations etc. This book is something of a necessary evil for learning torts, but as a reference book it doesn't really cut it. If you want a more clear and concise book that you can read or peruse or use as a reference then this is not the book for you. It's strictly a textbook, but one that does the job. It could have been done better and without the typos (surely a computer spellchecker could have been used as this is the 21st century for crying out loud!). I'll be selling my book back this coming semester simply because I don't think there is anything I need from this book that I can't get elsewhere and for the record I actually enjoyed learning about torts. I would thank my excellent professor more than this book though. |
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