This book is about the way in which the law of torts protects financial assets such as money, property, and contracts. It focuses on thye interests protected and does not follow the usual textbook arrangement of the law according to the various torts (such as trespass, negligence, anddefamation). The discussion goes well beyond the debate about recovery for economic loss in negligence and places that debate in a much wider context. The introduction explains the notion of economic interests and why this has been chosen as the focus of attention. The second part gives an accountof the relevant rules of tort law. The third part examines the relationship between tort law and other legal categories such as contract, trusts, and restitution; and between tort law and other techniques for protecting economic interests such as regulation and insurance. The final part discussesthe aims and function sof tort law. Many of the issues discussed receive very little attention in most tort texts.The book's focus on interests is fruitful because it leads us to consider the ways in which the protection of economic interests by tort law differs from that provided by other areas of law. It also alerts us to the fact that tort law plays a significant part in protecting interests recognized byproperty law and contract law. Viewing tort law in terms of the ways it protects economic interests leads to the important realization that the juridical techniques of the common law of tort have parallels in statutory causes of action, which often interact with common law causes of action incomplex ways. At a slightly more general level, this examination of the the functions of tort law in protecting economic interests helps to reveal their complexity and to explain inconsistencies within the general body of tort doctrine.