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18 Envtl. L. 151 (1987-1988)
Victim without a Cause: The Missing Link between Compensation and Deterrence in Toxic Tort Litigation

handle is hein.journals/envlnw18 and id is 165 raw text is: VICTIM WITHOUT A CAUSE: THE MISSING
LINK BETWEEN COMPENSATION AND
DETERRENCE IN TOXIC TORT LITIGATION
By
JOHN S. FORSTROM*
The 1980s have seen an explosion in the number of toxic sub-
stance emergencies resulting in severe impacts on human health.
Yet, for persons injured by exposure to toxic substances, existing
tort law remedies generally provide only a limited avenue of com-
pensation. For many reasons, toxic tort victims face imposing bar-
riers to success in their attempts to litigate against toxic pol-
luters. With conventional tort law's inadequacy in the context of
toxic injuries, new approaches to toxic victim compensation have
been called for. In evaluating these alternative approaches to the
toxic injury problem, the design of a comprehensive victim com-
pensation program for Canada (and the United States) can be se-
riously considered.
I. INTRODUCTION
For decades, North Americans have reaped the material ben-
efits of industrialization, made possible to a large extent through
the exploitation of advanced chemical technology. American in-
dustry currently produces, distributes and consumes over 63,000
different chemicals;' the United States production of organic
chemicals is estimated to have increased 1,500 percent between
1950 and 1985.2 An unwelcome consequence of this better living
through chemistry' phenomenon, however, has been the dra-
matic increase in the volume of hazardous substances entering
the environment. In 1981, for example, United States industry
generated over two hundred million tons of hazardous chemical
* Lawyer, Swinton & Co., Vancouver, British Columbia. LL.B. 1986, Univer-
sity of Victoria Law School; B.A. 1984, University of British Columbia. The author
wishes to thank Professor T. Murray Rankin for his comments and assistance.
Substantive errors, if any, remain the sole responsibility of the author.
1. Maugh, Chemicals: How Many Are There?, 199 SCIENCE 162, 162 (1978).
2. Rehbinder, Control of Environmental Chemicals, Trends in Environmen-
tal Policy and Law 199 (1980).
3. See Costle & Beck, Attack on Hazardous Wastes: Turning Back the Toxic
Tide, 9 CAP. UL. REv. 425, 425 (1980).

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