This short article represents, in substance, a memorandum of evidence submitted to the Joint Scrutiny Committee on the Draft Mental Health Bill
In this Article, I provide additional support for my recent proposal* to extend federal mental healt...
This is the second of two articles examining the Mental Health Act 2001, the main piece of mental he...
In this article, Professor Gunn discusses autonomy, consent and compulsion in mental health treatmen...
Nobody who works in or writes about this area of the law can fail to acknowledge that we are experie...
Szmukler, Daw and Dawson have produced a detailed and carefully worded proposal for a new approach f...
This paper considers what has come to be known as the ‘interface’ between the Mental Capacity Act 20...
Except for the criminal justice system, the Mental Health Act 1983 (as amended by the MHA 2007) is t...
This article considers the Government’s legislative proposals against the domestic law background, s...
This article looks at the role of compulsion in mental health law as it applies to civil patients. I...
The possibility of a single statue to replace our current dual approach must now be the most fundame...
This article compares the bases upon which actions are taken or decisions are made in relation to th...
It would be a mistake to think of mental health law as a generic form of law directed at a particula...
The Mental Health Bill has been scrutinised by the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights (‘J...
This paper considers three possible justifications for psychiatric compulsion - dangerousness, capac...
In this second Five-Minute Focus on Law on mental health, we consider how the law deals with the tre...
In this Article, I provide additional support for my recent proposal* to extend federal mental healt...
This is the second of two articles examining the Mental Health Act 2001, the main piece of mental he...
In this article, Professor Gunn discusses autonomy, consent and compulsion in mental health treatmen...
Nobody who works in or writes about this area of the law can fail to acknowledge that we are experie...
Szmukler, Daw and Dawson have produced a detailed and carefully worded proposal for a new approach f...
This paper considers what has come to be known as the ‘interface’ between the Mental Capacity Act 20...
Except for the criminal justice system, the Mental Health Act 1983 (as amended by the MHA 2007) is t...
This article considers the Government’s legislative proposals against the domestic law background, s...
This article looks at the role of compulsion in mental health law as it applies to civil patients. I...
The possibility of a single statue to replace our current dual approach must now be the most fundame...
This article compares the bases upon which actions are taken or decisions are made in relation to th...
It would be a mistake to think of mental health law as a generic form of law directed at a particula...
The Mental Health Bill has been scrutinised by the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights (‘J...
This paper considers three possible justifications for psychiatric compulsion - dangerousness, capac...
In this second Five-Minute Focus on Law on mental health, we consider how the law deals with the tre...
In this Article, I provide additional support for my recent proposal* to extend federal mental healt...
This is the second of two articles examining the Mental Health Act 2001, the main piece of mental he...
In this article, Professor Gunn discusses autonomy, consent and compulsion in mental health treatmen...