The Mental Health Bill has been scrutinised by the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights (‘JCHR’). The JCHR decided to consider the Mental Health Bill because it raises “significant human rights issues”. This article takes a look at the details of the JCHR report
The Government intends to replace the Mental Health Act 1983, and the most recent of its proposals w...
In ‘Almost a Revolution: Mental Health Law and the Limits of Change’, Prof. Paul Applebaum, writing ...
Nobody who works in or writes about this area of the law can fail to acknowledge that we are experie...
As this issue of the JMHL goes to press, the projected Mental Health Bill discussed in our previous ...
In the management of mentally ill patients, there is a tension between protecting the rights of indi...
This article discusses the Government’s Response to the Joint Parliamentary Scrutiny Committee Repor...
This article focusses on two questions in relation to the interplay of the Human Rights Act and the ...
The past decade has seen a significant growth in attention to the human rights of persons with disab...
The past decade has seen a significant growth in attention to the human rights of persons with disab...
In the final months leading to the publication of a revised Bill in 2003, this issue of the Journal ...
Responses and comments on the Draft Mental Health Bill are provided by:The Law SocietyThe Royal Coll...
Lord Shaftesbury complained that it took him ‘seventeen years of labour and anxiety’ to get the Luna...
Those who have been following the progress of the mental health law reforms in England and Wales may...
This short account of the history of the reform of the Mental Health Act covers the main issues that...
Mental health issues are increasingly finding their way onto national, European and international ag...
The Government intends to replace the Mental Health Act 1983, and the most recent of its proposals w...
In ‘Almost a Revolution: Mental Health Law and the Limits of Change’, Prof. Paul Applebaum, writing ...
Nobody who works in or writes about this area of the law can fail to acknowledge that we are experie...
As this issue of the JMHL goes to press, the projected Mental Health Bill discussed in our previous ...
In the management of mentally ill patients, there is a tension between protecting the rights of indi...
This article discusses the Government’s Response to the Joint Parliamentary Scrutiny Committee Repor...
This article focusses on two questions in relation to the interplay of the Human Rights Act and the ...
The past decade has seen a significant growth in attention to the human rights of persons with disab...
The past decade has seen a significant growth in attention to the human rights of persons with disab...
In the final months leading to the publication of a revised Bill in 2003, this issue of the Journal ...
Responses and comments on the Draft Mental Health Bill are provided by:The Law SocietyThe Royal Coll...
Lord Shaftesbury complained that it took him ‘seventeen years of labour and anxiety’ to get the Luna...
Those who have been following the progress of the mental health law reforms in England and Wales may...
This short account of the history of the reform of the Mental Health Act covers the main issues that...
Mental health issues are increasingly finding their way onto national, European and international ag...
The Government intends to replace the Mental Health Act 1983, and the most recent of its proposals w...
In ‘Almost a Revolution: Mental Health Law and the Limits of Change’, Prof. Paul Applebaum, writing ...
Nobody who works in or writes about this area of the law can fail to acknowledge that we are experie...