Meno’s paradox—which asks ‘how will you know it is the thing you didn’t know?’—appears in Plato’s dialogue of the same name. This article suggests that a similar question arises in some supportive relationships. Attention to this question clarifies one condition necessary to justify making a best interests decisions against someone’s will: the decided-for person must be unable to recognise that they have failed to recognise a need. From this condition, two duties are derived: a duty to ensure that someone cannot recognise that they have failed to recognise a need before making a decision against their will; and a duty to provide consensual support to those who have had decisions made against their will, in order to help them to avoid such s...
Calls for the adoption of a universal capacity approach to replace dedicated mental health law are m...
This article examines medical decision-making, arguing that the law, properly understood, requires w...
This article compares the bases upon which actions are taken or decisions are made in relation to th...
The Mental Capacity Act requires that where a person (P) lacks capacity to make a decision her wishe...
The Mental Capacity Act 2005 sets out a ground-breaking statutory framework to empower and protect v...
Article 12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, as interpret...
The 2005 Mental Capacity Act (MCA) in England and Wales is innovative in formulating a principled, l...
Objective: To clarify the concept of best interests, setting out how they should be ascertained and ...
The concept of capacity that emerges from the Mental Capacity Act (2005) is conceptually flawed and ...
Decisions under the Mental Capacity Act (MCA) may be made in a person’s best interest. This concept ...
The law’s cliff-edge approach to mental capacity denies those who lack capacity any right to determi...
The notion of capacity implicit in the Mental Capacity Act is subject to a tension between two claim...
In this article, Professor Gunn discusses autonomy, consent and compulsion in mental health treatmen...
The Mental Capacity Act (2005) is an impressive piece of legislation that deserves serious ethical ...
Patients have a right to autonomy that encompasses making medical decisions that others consider ‘ba...
Calls for the adoption of a universal capacity approach to replace dedicated mental health law are m...
This article examines medical decision-making, arguing that the law, properly understood, requires w...
This article compares the bases upon which actions are taken or decisions are made in relation to th...
The Mental Capacity Act requires that where a person (P) lacks capacity to make a decision her wishe...
The Mental Capacity Act 2005 sets out a ground-breaking statutory framework to empower and protect v...
Article 12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, as interpret...
The 2005 Mental Capacity Act (MCA) in England and Wales is innovative in formulating a principled, l...
Objective: To clarify the concept of best interests, setting out how they should be ascertained and ...
The concept of capacity that emerges from the Mental Capacity Act (2005) is conceptually flawed and ...
Decisions under the Mental Capacity Act (MCA) may be made in a person’s best interest. This concept ...
The law’s cliff-edge approach to mental capacity denies those who lack capacity any right to determi...
The notion of capacity implicit in the Mental Capacity Act is subject to a tension between two claim...
In this article, Professor Gunn discusses autonomy, consent and compulsion in mental health treatmen...
The Mental Capacity Act (2005) is an impressive piece of legislation that deserves serious ethical ...
Patients have a right to autonomy that encompasses making medical decisions that others consider ‘ba...
Calls for the adoption of a universal capacity approach to replace dedicated mental health law are m...
This article examines medical decision-making, arguing that the law, properly understood, requires w...
This article compares the bases upon which actions are taken or decisions are made in relation to th...