Wye Valley NHS Trust v Mr B [2015] EWCOP 60 illustrates the extent to which the wishes, feelings, beliefs, and values strongly expressed by a person who lacks decision-making capacity are to be considered in determining his best interests. Whilst not going as far as a supported decision-making model, as endorsed by the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, the case exemplifies the participative ethos of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and the requirement that the person lacking capacity should participate as fully as possible in any decision affecting him
In the recent judgment of WBC (Local Authority) v Z, X, Y1 a twenty-year-old woman with Asperger Syn...
Article 12 (2) of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities guarantees persons wi...
covers all decisions on personal welfare including financial matters, relating to people who tempora...
Calls for the adoption of a universal capacity approach to replace dedicated mental health law are m...
The law’s cliff-edge approach to mental capacity denies those who lack capacity any right to determi...
The Mental Capacity Act received Royal Assent on 7 April 2005, and it will be implemented in 2007. T...
The right to equal recognition before the law, protected by Article 12 of the United Nations (UN) Co...
Neuroscientific endeavours to uncover the causes of severe mental impairments may be viewed as suppo...
This paper is concerned with the role of ‘Capacity’ as a conceptual basis for the law’s understandin...
This paper is concerned with the role of ‘Capacity’ as a conceptual basis for the law’s understandin...
This paper is concerned with the role of ‘Capacity’ as a conceptual basis for the law’s understandin...
This paper is concerned with the role of ‘Capacity’ as a conceptual basis for the law’s understandin...
This paper is concerned with the role of ‘Capacity’ as a conceptual basis for the law’s understandin...
regarding advanced decisions (living wills), particularly in respect to the conditions that must be ...
This paper explores the distinction between being autonomous and having capacity for the purposes of...
In the recent judgment of WBC (Local Authority) v Z, X, Y1 a twenty-year-old woman with Asperger Syn...
Article 12 (2) of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities guarantees persons wi...
covers all decisions on personal welfare including financial matters, relating to people who tempora...
Calls for the adoption of a universal capacity approach to replace dedicated mental health law are m...
The law’s cliff-edge approach to mental capacity denies those who lack capacity any right to determi...
The Mental Capacity Act received Royal Assent on 7 April 2005, and it will be implemented in 2007. T...
The right to equal recognition before the law, protected by Article 12 of the United Nations (UN) Co...
Neuroscientific endeavours to uncover the causes of severe mental impairments may be viewed as suppo...
This paper is concerned with the role of ‘Capacity’ as a conceptual basis for the law’s understandin...
This paper is concerned with the role of ‘Capacity’ as a conceptual basis for the law’s understandin...
This paper is concerned with the role of ‘Capacity’ as a conceptual basis for the law’s understandin...
This paper is concerned with the role of ‘Capacity’ as a conceptual basis for the law’s understandin...
This paper is concerned with the role of ‘Capacity’ as a conceptual basis for the law’s understandin...
regarding advanced decisions (living wills), particularly in respect to the conditions that must be ...
This paper explores the distinction between being autonomous and having capacity for the purposes of...
In the recent judgment of WBC (Local Authority) v Z, X, Y1 a twenty-year-old woman with Asperger Syn...
Article 12 (2) of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities guarantees persons wi...
covers all decisions on personal welfare including financial matters, relating to people who tempora...