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Punishment, reparation and the evolution of private law : the actio iniuriarum in a changing world - delict

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journal contribution
posted on 2019-09-27, 10:30 authored by François du Bois
Tracking the long journey of the actio iniuriarum from its Roman origins via seventeeth century Holland to South African law today, this contribution explores its transformation from a punitive action into a reparative one. In doing so, it engages with vital questions about the evolution of our contemporary concept of private law: how did it come about, how did this conceptual development of the law interact with the law’s substantive content, and what does this tell us about the way in which private law relates to a changing environment? This survey shows how the growing differentiation of private law as a distinctive field drove forward conceptual and procedural innovations which, with increasing intensity, focused attention on the nature of the individual entitlements at play, and tended to a bilateral form of justice in which liability is imposed only when, and only to the extent that, it is justified to hold one person liable to the another. Whereas in Roman law hubristic behaviour was the core of the wrong and any impact on the victim the means bringing this about, the South African law of delict treats the impact on the victim as the gist of the wrong, and the defendant’s behaviour as the means. It is this change, along with the associated separation of criminal and civil liability, that has enabled the actio iniuriarum to survive into a fundamentally changed world.

History

Citation

Acta Juridica, Volume 2019 Number 1, Dec 2019, p. 229 - 282

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/Leicester Law School

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Acta Juridica

Volume

2019

Issue

1

Pagination

229-282

Publisher

Juta Law

issn

0065-1346

Acceptance date

2019-08-14

Copyright date

2019

Available date

2019-12-01

Notes

The file associated with this record is under embargo until 6 months after publication, in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy. The full text may be available through the publisher links provided above.

Language

en

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