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75 U. Cin. L. Rev. 1595 (2006-2007)
We're All in This Together: Extending Sovereign Immunity to Encourage Private Parties to Reduce Public Risk

handle is hein.journals/ucinlr75 and id is 1605 raw text is: WE'RE ALL IN THIS TOGETHER:
EXTENDING SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY
TO ENCOURAGE PRIVATE PARTIES
TO REDUCE PUBLIC RISK
Paul Taylor
I. INTRODUCTION
The concept of sovereign immunity--the doctrine under which
governments are considered immune from suit unless they consent to
such suits-has long been supported by the policy that, if government is
necessary to perform some essential functions, it should be able to
perform those functions free from costly litigation that would allow
courts and juries to second guess government policies. From the
concept of sovereign immunity has grown the judicially-created doctrine
of the government contractor defense, under which private entities that
contract with. government to help it perform its necessary functions
(predominantly military operations) are held to share the government's
immunity from suit, lest government be denied its ability to most
effectively further its national defense goals by relying on the private
sector for goods and services that are essential to the success of those
efforts. But the judicially-created doctrine of the government contractor
defense has proven so vague in its contours and application that it has
not provided private entities with the necessary confidence that the
defense would be upheld to protect the actions they undertake to reduce
the risks to which the public is exposed (public risk) in the evolving
contexts of efforts to fight terrorism and to combat naturally occurring
diseases.
As it has become increasingly clear both that legislatures (and expert
agencies insofar as legislatures choose to defer to them)-not courts and
the litigation process-are the most appropriate developers of policies
designed to maximally reduce public risks, and that government must
rely on the private sector to help counter more and varied threats to its
citizens, Congress recently enacted two federal statutes-the SAFETY
Act and the PREP Act-to provide private entities that can more greatly
reduce risks to the public safety with protection from litigation that
would have otherwise deterred them from acting at all. Both these
statutes are supported by the policies undergirding sovereign immunity
and one, the SAFETY Act, explicitly codifies, for the first time, the

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