units
LAW5003
Faculty of Law
This unit entry is for students who completed this unit in 2016 only. For students planning to study the unit, please refer to the unit indexes in the the current edition of the Handbook. If you have any queries contact the managing faculty for your course or area of study.
Refer to the specific census and withdrawal dates for the semester(s) in which this unit is offered.
Faculty
Quota applies
Postgraduate programs are based on a model of small group teaching and therefore class sizes need to be restricted.
Offered
City (Melbourne)
Notes
For postgraduate Law discontinuation dates, please see http://www.monash.edu/law/current-students/postgraduate/pg-jd-discontinuation-dates
For postgraduate Law unit timetables, please see http://law.monash.edu.au/current-students/course-unit-information/timetables/postgraduate/index.html
Previously coded as LAW7266
This unit introduces students to the law of civil wrongs (torts), including the role and purposes of tort law, the interests which it protects, and its relationship to statutory schemes which provide compensation for injury or loss. Students begin with selected intentional torts (trespass to the person, assault and battery, false imprisonment, trespass to land) and the strict liability tort of private nuisance, including elements and defences. Students then study the tort of negligence; its development, the elements of the tort and the various contexts in which it arises, the types of harms that are compensable, defences, the assessment of damages; concurrent liability and contribution by multiple wrongdoers, the particular problems raised by negligently caused mental harm and pure economic loss, and the concept of vicarious liability. Students will examine the impact of statutory law reform, in particular the civil liability reforms, on torts law, and broader policy debates about how civil wrongs should be redressed and injuries and losses compensated.
On completion of this unit students will be able to:
1. Research assignment (case focussed assessment, such as a case note - 2,250 words): 30%
2. Examination (2 hours plus 30 minutes reading and noting time): 70%
Students enrolled in this unit will be provided with 36 contact hours of seminars per semester whether intensive, semi-intensive, or semester-long offering. Students will be expected to do reading set for class, and to undertake additional research and reading applicable to a 6 credit point unit.
Dr Karinne Ludlow Personal ProfilePersonal Profile (http://monash.edu/research/people/profiles/profile.html?sid=407&pid=2675) Trimester 1
Assoc Prof Janice Richardson Research ProfileResearch Profile (http://monash.edu/research/people/profiles/profile.html?sid=51104&pid=5482) Trimester 2
Dr Joanna KyriakakisPersonal ProfilePersonal Profile (http://monash.edu/research/people/profiles/profile.html?sid=5876&pid=3811) Trimester 3