Insuring morality |
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Authors: | Tom Baker |
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Affiliation: | Connecticut Mutual Professor of Law , University of Connecticut School of Law, 65 Elizabeth St. , Hartford, CT, 06105, USA E-mail: tbaker@law.uconn.edu |
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Abstract: | This article describes and compares two forms of moral regulation employed in connection with insurance institutions. The first governs through moralized personal attributes or pressures like 'temptation' and 'character'. The second governs through moralized institutional or system attributes and processes described in terms of 'efficiency'. The article traces these forms of moral regulation from the mid-nineteenth century to the present, arguing that both continue to inform popular and specialized discourses of risk. |
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Keywords: | Insurance Risk Moral Regulation Moral Hazard Actuarialism |
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