Private law courts in the UK have maintained the de minimis threshold as a condition precedent for a successful claim for the infliction of mental harm. This de minimis threshold necessitates the presence of a ‘recognised psychiatric illness’ as opposed to ‘mere emotion’. This standard has also been adopted by the criminal law courts when reading the Offences Against the Person Act 1861 to include non-physical injury. In determining the cut-off point between psychiatric injury and mere emotion, the courts have adopted a generally passive acceptance of expert testimony and the guidelines used by mental health professionals to make diagnoses. Yet these guidelines were developed for use in a clinical setting, not a legal one. This article exa...
We are immensely grateful to the commentators for their careful reading of the Model ‘Fusion’ Law (M...
This case concerns the scope of the compulsory treatment provisions of the Mental Health Act 1983. I...
The timing of the English Law Commission's consideration of reform to the law of insanity coincides ...
Private law courts in the UK have maintained the de minimis threshold as a condition precedent for a...
This paper considers what has come to be known as the ‘interface’ between the Mental Capacity Act 20...
In England and Wales mental health services need to take account of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and...
The article examines the very low threshold test for capacity to instruct a solicitor, applied by th...
One of the most problematic relationships between neuroscience and the law is the politicised area o...
Insanity definition and the threshold for satisfying its legal criteria tend to vary depending on th...
Since liability for psychiatric injury was first recognised, it has been evident that the extent of ...
Szmukler, Daw and Dawson have produced a detailed and carefully worded proposal for a new approach f...
One of tort law\u27s great failures is its treatment of claims for psychiatric damage (or, to use a ...
Since at least 1970, one of the constraints upon compensability for pure mental harm at common law h...
R (B) v Ashworth Hospital AuthorityHouse of Lords; 17 March 2005[2005] UKHL 20, [2005] Mental Health...
Current English law has few controls on the involuntary treatment of persons detained under the Ment...
We are immensely grateful to the commentators for their careful reading of the Model ‘Fusion’ Law (M...
This case concerns the scope of the compulsory treatment provisions of the Mental Health Act 1983. I...
The timing of the English Law Commission's consideration of reform to the law of insanity coincides ...
Private law courts in the UK have maintained the de minimis threshold as a condition precedent for a...
This paper considers what has come to be known as the ‘interface’ between the Mental Capacity Act 20...
In England and Wales mental health services need to take account of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and...
The article examines the very low threshold test for capacity to instruct a solicitor, applied by th...
One of the most problematic relationships between neuroscience and the law is the politicised area o...
Insanity definition and the threshold for satisfying its legal criteria tend to vary depending on th...
Since liability for psychiatric injury was first recognised, it has been evident that the extent of ...
Szmukler, Daw and Dawson have produced a detailed and carefully worded proposal for a new approach f...
One of tort law\u27s great failures is its treatment of claims for psychiatric damage (or, to use a ...
Since at least 1970, one of the constraints upon compensability for pure mental harm at common law h...
R (B) v Ashworth Hospital AuthorityHouse of Lords; 17 March 2005[2005] UKHL 20, [2005] Mental Health...
Current English law has few controls on the involuntary treatment of persons detained under the Ment...
We are immensely grateful to the commentators for their careful reading of the Model ‘Fusion’ Law (M...
This case concerns the scope of the compulsory treatment provisions of the Mental Health Act 1983. I...
The timing of the English Law Commission's consideration of reform to the law of insanity coincides ...