This paper is concerned with the role of ‘Capacity’ as a conceptual basis for the law’s understanding and treatment of individuals with mental health concerns and mental disabilities. Focusing on the binary nature of the Capacity paradigm under the Mental Capacity Act 2005, it seeks to argue in favour of a more nuanced understanding of and response to circumstances of incapacity and partial capacity. Drawing on Martha Fineman’s and Alan Gewirth’s conceptions of Vulnerability, the Social Model of Disability and the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, it argues in favour of a spectral approach to issues of capacity and autonomy. Under this framework, emphasis is drawn towards supported decision making through...
Neuroscientific endeavours to uncover the causes of severe mental impairments may be viewed as suppo...
This article explores the development of law and policy relating to mental capacity law, situating t...
Calls for the adoption of a universal capacity approach to replace dedicated mental health law are m...
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...
This article engages with emerging debates in law and feminist philosophy around the concept of vuln...
The UK Mental Capacity Act provides an important legislative framework for protecting persons who ar...
The law’s cliff-edge approach to mental capacity denies those who lack capacity any right to determi...
This paper explores the distinction between being autonomous and having capacity for the purposes of...
The lawâs cliff-edge approach to mental capacity denies those who lack capacity any right to determi...
The lawâs cliff-edge approach to mental capacity denies those who lack capacity any right to determi...
This paper examines mental capacity as a medico-legal social construct and concludes that, while the...
Neuroscientific endeavours to uncover the causes of severe mental impairments may be viewed as suppo...
This article explores the development of law and policy relating to mental capacity law, situating t...
Calls for the adoption of a universal capacity approach to replace dedicated mental health law are m...
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...
This article engages with emerging debates in law and feminist philosophy around the concept of vuln...
The UK Mental Capacity Act provides an important legislative framework for protecting persons who ar...
The law’s cliff-edge approach to mental capacity denies those who lack capacity any right to determi...
This paper explores the distinction between being autonomous and having capacity for the purposes of...
The lawâs cliff-edge approach to mental capacity denies those who lack capacity any right to determi...
The lawâs cliff-edge approach to mental capacity denies those who lack capacity any right to determi...
This paper examines mental capacity as a medico-legal social construct and concludes that, while the...
Neuroscientific endeavours to uncover the causes of severe mental impairments may be viewed as suppo...
This article explores the development of law and policy relating to mental capacity law, situating t...
Calls for the adoption of a universal capacity approach to replace dedicated mental health law are m...