Article

Litigation and liability in concussion research and collaboration

Details

Citation

McArdle D & DeMartini AL (2024) Litigation and liability in concussion research and collaboration. Sport, Ethics and Philosophy, pp. 1-20. https://doi.org/10.1080/17511321.2024.2361909

Abstract
This paper explores, first, the common law principles of personal injury litigation explored through court decisions relating to sports injuries in (primarily) England and Wales and, second, the statutory schemes relating to concussion liability in the US. It explores the difficulties of using those civil law strategies as a means of establishing liability for injuries arising from sports-related concussion (SRC) and explains why they are of such limited utility. While proposed class actions over historically-acquired injuries or individual litigation over recent catastrophic injury may have some merit, and while future amendments to the US laws might remove some of their inherent flaws the difficulties in establishing liability for personal injury will always be exacerbated by the specific characteristics of SRC and the legal, factual and evidential issues that arise. For those reasons, the paper considers the potential benefits of other means of concussion prevention and mitigation, including no-fault compensation and mandatory insurance, the more widespread use of effective, nuanced concussion protocols and inter-disciplinary research which engages with doctrinal legal research.

Keywords
Concussion; negligence; legislation; liability

Notes
Output Status: Forthcoming/Available Online

Journal
Sport, Ethics and Philosophy

StatusPublished
FundersThe Royal Society of Edinburgh
Publication date03/06/2024
Publication date online17/06/2024
Date accepted by journal24/05/2024
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/36170
PublisherInforma UK Limited
ISSN1751-1321
eISSN1751-133X

People (1)

Dr David McArdle

Dr David McArdle

Senior Lecturer, Law

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