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Invite colleaguesCorporate management and executive liability in the airport industry
Abstract
In the past, an airport was simply a terminus, much like a bus terminus of that time, assigning it as the focal geographical point at which people gathered to embark on a plane for a journey by air, or disembark after an air journey. However, the traditional definition of an airport is being reshaped and refined to accord with the fact that airports are now complex industrial enterprises. Quite apart from the essential air-side support given by airports to landing and departing aircraft, there are commercial facilities provided for both passengers and the public within the terminal building by concessionaires who are specialists in their own fields of business. More and more, airports are evolving from being basic aeronautical infrastructures into complex, multi-functional enterprises serving the travelling public while at the same time catering to their commercial needs and those of others who visit the airport. Such enterprises include duty-free shops, speciality retail and brand-name shops, restaurants, hotels and accommodation, banks, business and office complexes, leisure, recreation and fitness centres, to name just a few. Current commercial activities at an airport bring to bear the relevance of business law in the day-to-day running of the airport. The most significant of legal elements in this context lie in the area of corporate negligence and liability. This paper addresses the areas of corporate management, corporate and executive liability and negligent entrustment.
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Author's Biography
Ruwantissa Abeyratne has worked in the field of aviation law and management for over 25 years. He is currently Coordinator, Regional Affairs, at the International Civil Aviation Organization. He also teaches aero politics, law and policy at the John Molson School of Business, Concordia University, in the global aviation MBA programme. He holds the degrees of doctor of civil laws (DCL) from McGill University, doctor of philosophy (PhD) and bachelor of laws (LLB) from the University of Colombo and master of laws (LLM) from Monash University. He has written numerous books and over 300 journal articles on international law and air law, in addition to many papers presented to conferences. His books include Aviation in Crisis, Air Law and Policy, Aviation and Diplomacy, Aeropolitics, Aviation and the Environment, Aviation Security Law and Airport Business Law. Dr Abeyratne is a Fellow of both the Royal Aeronautical Society and the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport. He is also a member of the International Law Association, in which he serves as a member of both the Association’s International Trade Law Committee and Space Law Committee. He is a founder member of the Montreal Branch of the Royal Aeronautical Society.