This Article will examine the reverse trend in civil commitment laws in the wake of recent tragedies and discuss the effect of broader civil commitment standards on the care and treatment of the mentally ill. The 2007 Virginia Tech shooting, the 2011 shooting of Congresswoman Giffords, and the 2012 Aurora movie theatre shooting have spurred fierce debates about the dangerousness of mentally ill and serve as cautionary tale about what happens when warning signs go unnoticed and opportunities for early intervention missed. This piece will explore the misconception about the role medication and inpatient civil commitments should play in prevention of dangerousness and undermine the belief that we can medicate away the needs of the mentally ill...
The imposition of substantive and procedural protections in the civil commitment process thirty year...
The subject of this Article is people who have been civilly committed under a state’s parens patriae...
The states have traditionally exercised broad power to commit the mentally ill. Civil commitment of ...
This Article will examine the reverse trend in civil commitment laws in the wake of recent tragedies...
The civil commitment of mentally ill individuals presents the legal system with an intractable quest...
Almost every American state allows civil commitment upon a finding that a person, as a result of men...
Almost every American state allows civil commitment upon a finding that a person, as a result of men...
In one of its most controversial decisions to date, United States v Comstock, the Roberts Court uphe...
When a dangerously mentally ill person is in need of in-patient psychiatric hospitalization, the app...
The Supreme Court has recognized that civil commitment constitutes a significant deprivation of libe...
Traditionally, the power of the state has included the power to commit mentally ill citizens to psyc...
In one of its most controversial decisions to date, United States v. Comstock, the Roberts Court uph...
Every year, millions of Americans struggle with serious mental illness. Of them, thousands experienc...
It is often presumed that the legal rights of those who are mentally ill or alleged to be mentally i...
In its Spring 1985 issue, this Review published an article by Professors Mary L. Durham and John Q. ...
The imposition of substantive and procedural protections in the civil commitment process thirty year...
The subject of this Article is people who have been civilly committed under a state’s parens patriae...
The states have traditionally exercised broad power to commit the mentally ill. Civil commitment of ...
This Article will examine the reverse trend in civil commitment laws in the wake of recent tragedies...
The civil commitment of mentally ill individuals presents the legal system with an intractable quest...
Almost every American state allows civil commitment upon a finding that a person, as a result of men...
Almost every American state allows civil commitment upon a finding that a person, as a result of men...
In one of its most controversial decisions to date, United States v Comstock, the Roberts Court uphe...
When a dangerously mentally ill person is in need of in-patient psychiatric hospitalization, the app...
The Supreme Court has recognized that civil commitment constitutes a significant deprivation of libe...
Traditionally, the power of the state has included the power to commit mentally ill citizens to psyc...
In one of its most controversial decisions to date, United States v. Comstock, the Roberts Court uph...
Every year, millions of Americans struggle with serious mental illness. Of them, thousands experienc...
It is often presumed that the legal rights of those who are mentally ill or alleged to be mentally i...
In its Spring 1985 issue, this Review published an article by Professors Mary L. Durham and John Q. ...
The imposition of substantive and procedural protections in the civil commitment process thirty year...
The subject of this Article is people who have been civilly committed under a state’s parens patriae...
The states have traditionally exercised broad power to commit the mentally ill. Civil commitment of ...