Recreation Law Center

Latest Legal Case: Your Duty of Care—Where Does it Begin and End?

Duty of Care is the legal duty to protect another from harm. It is the first element that must be established to proceed with an action in negligence. When you bring a client into your program, you almost always establish some duty of care to that client. But where does this duty begin and where does it end? A recent sexual assault case in Maine where the assualt happened after the program explores this delicate legal issue and raises some critical questions for things that happen outside your program. Now that many programs are using social networking like Facebook pages, discussion forums, and Twitter as follow-up tools after a program, everyone should understand this legal issue. Reb Gregg and Catherine Hansen-Stamp, the legal authorities at the Adventure & Recreation Law Center, review the details of this Maine case. Subscribe now and gain access to the complete library of Legal Cases.

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Blog - Post List
  • Wilderness Medicine

    Treating Rattlesnake Bites in the Field

    by Paul Auerbach There are two excellent photographs of a rattlesnake bite victim that appear in the June 10, 2010 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine (362;23:2212). Entitled “Rattlesnake Envenomation” in the IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE...
  • Risk Management

    Does your Program Have a Road Crossing Protocol? Should it?

    Vehicles and driving are statistically the most dangerous thing that you can do in an outdoor program. As a result programs have extensive risk management protocols around vehicles and driving. But vehicles hazards aren't just associated with driving, what about when your groups come in contact with cars and roads in situations like where trails cross busy roads? Isn't this also a potentially serious risk management issue? And shouldn't you have some protocols in place to reduce these risks? I say the answer to both questions to yes and I propose a Road Crossing Protocol as a tool for leaders to help reduce the hazards associated with high-risk road crossings. If your program hikes across busy roads then you really need to read this article and consider how you would deal with this serious issue.

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  • Wilderness Medicine

    Hand Injuries Not to Miss

    by Paul Auerbach Hand injuries are common in outdoor enthusiasts. Some of these injuries are easy to diagnose, and others are more difficult, usually because the signs and symptoms are subtle or because the examiner is inexperienced. Emergency physicians...
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Media Gallery - File List
Type Title Downloads Rating

What it takes to make a white water river

Improvements made to a very popular recreational and competition course for whitewater paddling on the...
Posted to: Paddling
by 537

The dangers of Low Head Dams

This video by Tom Lindblade has been viewed 100K times on Google Video, and is re-posted here. Low head...
Posted to: Paddling
by 534

"Into the eddy" Boof

In this short video from www.WhitewaterInstruction.com Shane Benedict goes into detail on a specific...
Posted to: Paddling
by 531

Packing a Sea Kayak

This video from Kokatat Watersports explains some of the methods for effectively packing a sea kayak...
Posted to: Paddling
by 514

Sea Kayak Self Rescue

This video from Paul Kuthe of Alder Creek Kayak & Canoe on sea kayak self rescue covers one of the...
Posted to: Paddling
by 509
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Wikis - Page List
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