Torts and Terror
Civil Liability after September 11
About This Event

The events of September 11 and the possibility of further terrorist attacks have raised new questions about civil liability for mass torts. Many of the industries that are most exposed to substantial civil penalties – airlines, insurers, pharmaceutical companies – are also the most exposed to terror and the most critical to an effective response. Some observers view September 11 as an urgent call to reform a tort system that was, in more peaceful times, a bearable (albeit expensive) cost of doing business. Others view current attempts to limit liability as merely another effort to shelter politically favored industries from the ordinary operations of the tort system.

This conference on "Torts and Terror" will provide a public forum to discuss mass torts in the wake of September 11. The first panel will discuss now-and-future liability problems and proposed legislation in three areas: airlines and airport security, drugs and vaccines, and insurance and reinsurance for terror-related events. The second panel will discuss the extent to which terrorism and the war against it will, or should, prompt a change in the public and political debate over tort reform.

Agenda
9:00-10:30 a.m. Panel One
Michael S. Greve, Director, AEI Federalism Project
Christopher C. DeMuth, President, AEI (Chair)
Neil A. Doherty, Professor, The Wharton School
Bronwen Kaye, Senior Director, Government Relations, American Home Products
Kenneth P. Quinn, Counsel, Aviation Security Association
10:40 a.m.-Noon Panel Two
Michael S. Greve, Director, AEI Federalism Project
Robert R. Gasaway, Partner, Kirkland & Ellis
The Honorable Jon Kyl, United States Senator, Arizona (invited)
Jay P. Lefkowitz, General Counsel, OMB
Robert Peck, President, Center for Constitutional Litigation, ATLA
AEI Participants

 

Christopher
DeMuth
  • Christopher DeMuth was president of AEI from December 1986 through December 2008. Previously, he was administrator for information and regulatory affairs in the Office of Management and Budget and executive director of the Presidential Task Force on Regulatory Relief in the Reagan administration; taught economics, law, and regulatory policy at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University; practiced regulatory, antitrust, and general corporate law; and worked on urban and environmental policy in the Nixon White House.

     

  • Phone: 2028625895
    Email: cdemuth@aei.org
  • Assistant Info

    Name: Keriann Hopkins
    Phone: 2028625897
    Email: keriann.hopkins@aei.org

 

Michael S.
Greve
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