More than 30 years have passed since Ulrich Beck published Risk Society:
Towards a New Modernity. Beck's work had a transformative effect on
social theory, yet its impact on law and legal scholarship remains
largely unexplored. This collection of essays, collected shortly after
Beck's death in 2015, explores and reconsiders the legal foundations,
concepts and methodologies of the modern project in light of risk
society theory. In this volume, academics and lawyers from around the
world engage in one of the first comprehensive interrogations of the
impact of risk society theory on law and legal scholarship. The authors
critically examine topics such as: law and (ir)responsibility, reflexive
modernisation, and liability, responsibility and accountability through
the prism of risk society theory. This collection aims to explore the
capacity of law and legal processes to meet the challenges of modernity
and adapt to unfamiliar and changing social paradigms. This collection
will interest socio-legal scholars, practitioners, and students
confronted with the novel dilemmas of contemporary society. (Series:
Utrecht Centre for Accountability and Liability Law (UCALL), Vol. 10)
[Subject: Civil Law, Socio-Legal Studies]