Over the twentieth century, the Lunacy Office (renamed the Court of Protection in 1947) was responsible for appointing 'receivers' to manage the property of adults in England who were found incapable of managing their own affairs. Tens of thousands of people were in this position by the 1920s, and numbers continued to grow until after Second World War. This article uses the archives of the Office to examine the evolution of the concept of mental incapacity over the first half of the twentieth century, offering a corrective to the popular impression that the time before the Mental Capacity Act of 2005 was an era of ignorance and bad practice. It examines the changing ways in which being 'incapable' was understood and described, with particul...
This thesis compares criminal defences of insanity and idiocy between 1660 and 1830 in northern Engl...
Judges in England and Wales tell three apparently contradictory stories about the relationship betwe...
It is now more than a quarter of a century since the Law Commission completed its ground-breaking re...
This article explores the history of the Court of Protection of England & Wales (CoP) over the twent...
Current policy and practice directed towards people with learning disabilities originates in the dei...
There has recently been a proliferation of historical studies of mental deficiency in late nineteent...
Our legal system is still much admired by those who can gain access to it, but what about those who ...
In July 1939, at the Royal Courts of Justice in London, fifty-nine-year-old Beatrice Alexander was f...
At the core of much of the historiography of disability in so far as it relates to nineteenth centu...
In July 1939, at the Royal Courts of Justice in London, fifty-nine-year-old Beatrice Alexander was f...
Author's post-print draft. Final version published by Cambridge University Press; available online a...
This thesis is concerned with attempts to change the law which placed a British married woman under ...
This article compares the bases upon which actions are taken or decisions are made in relation to th...
The perception that people with disabilities increasingly became regarded as ‘other’ as the nineteen...
This article engages with emerging debates in law and feminist philosophy around the concept of vuln...
This thesis compares criminal defences of insanity and idiocy between 1660 and 1830 in northern Engl...
Judges in England and Wales tell three apparently contradictory stories about the relationship betwe...
It is now more than a quarter of a century since the Law Commission completed its ground-breaking re...
This article explores the history of the Court of Protection of England & Wales (CoP) over the twent...
Current policy and practice directed towards people with learning disabilities originates in the dei...
There has recently been a proliferation of historical studies of mental deficiency in late nineteent...
Our legal system is still much admired by those who can gain access to it, but what about those who ...
In July 1939, at the Royal Courts of Justice in London, fifty-nine-year-old Beatrice Alexander was f...
At the core of much of the historiography of disability in so far as it relates to nineteenth centu...
In July 1939, at the Royal Courts of Justice in London, fifty-nine-year-old Beatrice Alexander was f...
Author's post-print draft. Final version published by Cambridge University Press; available online a...
This thesis is concerned with attempts to change the law which placed a British married woman under ...
This article compares the bases upon which actions are taken or decisions are made in relation to th...
The perception that people with disabilities increasingly became regarded as ‘other’ as the nineteen...
This article engages with emerging debates in law and feminist philosophy around the concept of vuln...
This thesis compares criminal defences of insanity and idiocy between 1660 and 1830 in northern Engl...
Judges in England and Wales tell three apparently contradictory stories about the relationship betwe...
It is now more than a quarter of a century since the Law Commission completed its ground-breaking re...