Dynamic Tort Law: Review of Kenneth S. Abraham & G. Edward White, Tort Law and the Construction of Change: Studies in the Inevitability of History

Rarely does a book—let alone one on torts—come along with true staying power. Tort Law and the Construction of Change is such a book. It stopped me in my tracks when I first read it, and it has been a book to which I have returned again and again while teaching torts and probing new research projects. With Tort Law and the Construction of Change, Professors Kenneth Abraham and G. Edward White, who have inspired generations of torts students and scholars,1.As UVA Law Dean Risa Goluboff remarked at the UVA Law book panel Festschrift for Professors Abraham and White:[They] have been anchors of this faculty for a long time, maybe longer than you realize. They have been on this faculty for a combined total of nearly 90 years, both of them spending most of their professional lives here . . . . Over the past 10 years or so, they have both taught torts to generations of UVA Law students among other things.Transcript of UVA Law Book Panel at 2 (Sept. 22, 2022) (on file with the Virginia Law Review) [hereinafter Transcript].Show More have truly energized and inspired this nearly twenty-year veteran in the field.

Abraham and White explore the past, present, and future of tort law through a historical, theoretical, and pragmatic lens seeking to excavate and explicate how doctrines evolve. Their central thesis is that “[c]ontinuity arises in part out of linking current decisions, even if they are innovative and constitute an expansion of liability, to the principles expressed or implied in prior precedents,”2.Kenneth S. Abraham & G. Edward White, Tort Law and the Construction of Change: Studies in the Inevitability of History 206 (2022).Show More and that “external pressure for change in established common law doctrines is almost always filtered through received doctrinal frameworks.”3.Id. at 213.Show More I pay tribute to their book in this Essay, with equal parts praise (Part I), quibbling (Part II), and prodding for roads not taken (Part III).4.Here, I build upon remarks I made at the UVA Law book panel. See Transcript, supra note 1, at 13 (“I have three points I want to make. The first is going to be some praise. There’s a lot that’s praiseworthy in the book. The second is going to be a quibble, and the third is going to be a thought about the future.”).Show More

  1.  As UVA Law Dean Risa Goluboff remarked at the UVA Law book panel Festschrift for Professors Abraham and White:

    [They] have been anchors of this faculty for a long time, maybe longer than you realize. They have been on this faculty for a combined total of nearly 90 years, both of them spending most of their professional lives here . . . . Over the past 10 years or so, they have both taught torts to generations of UVA Law students among other things.

    Transcript of UVA Law Book Panel at 2 (Sept. 22, 2022) (on file with the Virginia Law Review) [hereinafter Transcript].

  2.  Kenneth S. Abraham & G. Edward White, Tort Law and the Construction of Change: Studies in the Inevitability of History 206 (2022).
  3.  Id. at 213.
  4. Here, I build upon remarks I made at the UVA Law book panel. See Transcript, supra note 1, at 13 (“I have three points I want to make. The first is going to be some praise. There’s a lot that’s praiseworthy in the book. The second is going to be a quibble, and the third is going to be a thought about the future.”).