UConn HomeSchool of Law
PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS STUDENTS ALUMNI/AE LIBRARY FACULTY ACADEMICS

This site will work and look better in a browser that supports web standards, but it is accessible to any browser or Internet device.

Insurance Law Center

Tom BakerToday, insurance demands our attention. Health reform, the reorganization of the financial services marketplace, tort reform, pension reform, Social Security reform, and other pressing aspects of law and public policy require a detailed understanding of insurance law and institutions. What is the difference between a mutual fund, a bank, or an insurance company? Are health care providers in the insurance business? Are insurance companies practicing medicine? Should public insurance programs invest in private securities? Can we trade the extension of health and disability insurance for tort law reform? These are among the many issues that comprise the work of the Insurance Law Center.

From Lord Mansfield's restructuring of marine insurance law in 18th century England to the U.S. Supreme Court's recent efforts to define the boundary between state and federal regulation of health benefits, law has long marked the field on which insurance institutions play. Indeed, law and lawyers are central to insurance. Lawyers write and apply the governing statutes and regulations. Lawyers structure the deals creating and reforming private enterprise. Lawyers handle the inevitable disputes. And, as often as not, lawyers cross the elusive border between pure law work and policy or management.

"Insurance ideas and practices define central privileges and responsibilities within a society. In that sense, our insurance arrangements form a material constitution, one that operates through routine, mundane transactions that nevertheless define the contours of individual and social responsibility. For that reason, studying who is eligible to receive what insurance benefits, and who pays for them, is as good a guide to the social compact as any combination of Supreme Court opinions."

-Tom Baker, On the Genealogy of Moral Hazard, 75 Texas Law Review 237 (1996)

Questions? Email us

Or contact us at:

Insurance Law Center
University of Connecticut School of Law
65 Elizabeth Street
Hartford, CT 06105
860-570-5177

      
FACULTY/STAFF DIRECTORY         SITE MAP         TEXT-ONLY University of Connecticut School of Law
45 Elizabeth Street
Hartford, CT 06105-2290
(860) 570-5000