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The Actuary and the Law (Staple Inn Reading 2000)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 June 2011

Abstract

The lecture discusses the issue of actuarial evidence in personal injury cases, and how the courts have been diffident towards actuarial evidence and the utility and importance of actuarial expertise. Until recently lawyers have not understood the ways in which actuaries work with probabilities. The lecture then shows that now the law has adopted actuarial thinking in several significant ways, and in particular in damages and personal injury cases. The discount rate for calculating the multiplier for future loss is discussed, as is the new area of risk assessment and conditional fees. Lawyers need actuarial help where appropriate, and both face the daily problem of applying the laws of probability to human activity.

Type
Sessional meetings: papers and abstracts of discussions
Copyright
Copyright © Institute and Faculty of Actuaries 2000

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References

(1) the literature of the Institute of Actuaries;Google Scholar
(2)Against the Gods — The Remarkable Story of Risk, by Bernstein, Peter (John Wiley and Sons, 1998);Google Scholar
(3) the Government Actuary's Department;Google Scholar
(4)Changes in Loss of Dependency Multipliers’, by Ross-McNairn, Edward and McLeod, Kirsty. In The Barrister, 6 June 2000;Google Scholar
(5) the Ogden tables in general, and Sir Michael Ogden, Q.C. in particular; andGoogle Scholar
(6) other sources identified in the text.Google Scholar