By Timothy M Ravich
Aviation Law after September 11th introduces the topic of aviation law with a particular emphasis on the subject post-September 11, 2001. Formatted as a traditional law school course book, the book presents the major tensions in the commercial and general aviation marketplace: consumer protection versus the corporate bottom-line; regulation versus deregulation; private enterprise and positive government; price versus convenience; liberty and privacy interests versus national security; internationalism versus nationalism; democracy versus terror; and fundamentally, life and death. With new content about “drones,” Aviation Law after September 11th is segmented into six chapters—aviation travel rights, deregulation and federal preemption, aviation economics, labor and management, aviation security, and accidents—and provides detailed end-of-chapter notes and problems for further study.
Timothy M. Ravich, Assistant Professor at the University of Central Florida, is a Martindale-Hubbell® AV-rated lawyer and one of only thirty-seven lawyers recognized as a Florida Bar Board Certified Aviation Lawyer. He earned his M.B.A. in Aviation Policy and Planning from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University and is a regular commentator for local and national media programming featuring aviation and aerospace, including NBC Universal, FOX, HUFFPost, and BloombergNews. He has spoken and written extensively about aviation issues in national and international forums and in peer-reviewed journals, including the American Bar Association, Southern Methodist University’s Journal of Air Law and Commerce, the North Dakota Law Review, the University of Miami Law Review, and the Journal of the Transportation Research Forum.
Hardcover 1002 pages, January 2016