Insurability of Emerging Risks: Law, Theory and Practice
By (Author) Baris Soyer
Edited by zlem Grses
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
23rd January 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Comparative law
Contract law
IT and Communications law / Postal laws and regulations
Hardback
360
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book brings together leading experts in the fields of insurance and the law of obligations to consider how insurance law is attempting to deal with emerging risks. Emerging risks pose significant challenges for the insurance industry. Apart from difficulties in quantifying such risks, the availability of insurance capacity is often a concern. The book looks at these issues from philosophical, economic, and actuarial perspectives. It asks how far existing private law rules can cope with emerging risks, and in so far as they cannot, how the law should be developed by courts and lawmakers to deal with the emerging legal issues. The book questions the suitability of the current insurance business models in insuring climate-related risks, autonomous systems, insurance of fines and penalties; and how mass or systemic risks (eg pandemics or cyber risks) can be made insurable through add on coverages to the conventional insurance policies. It also discusses how a balance can be struck between the need to regulate and the needs of market participants. The book will be of academic interest to anyone working in the field of insurance and also relevant for market participants, policy-makers and regulators.
Baris Soyer is Professor of Commercial and Maritime Law and Director of the Institute of International Shipping and Trade Law at Swansea University, UK. zlem Grses is Professor of Law at Kings College London, UK.