The High Court continues to exercise its inherent jurisdiction to make declarations about interventions into the lives of situationally vulnerable adults with mental capacity. In light of protective responses of health care providers and the courts to decision-making situations involving capacitous vulnerable adults, this paper has two aims. The first is diagnostic. The second is normative. The first aim is to identify the harms to a capacitous vulnerable adult’s autonomy that arise on the basis of the characterisation of situational vulnerability and autonomy as fundamentally opposed concepts or the failure to adequately acknowledge the conceptual relationship between them at common law. The second part of this aim is to draw upon developm...
Patients have a right to autonomy that encompasses making medical decisions that others consider ‘ba...
This thesis explores how the law deals with the patient's right to refuse treatment, evaluating the ...
The law’s cliff-edge approach to mental capacity denies those who lack capacity any right to determi...
The High Court continues to exercise its inherent jurisdiction to make declarations about interventi...
According to the High Court in England and Wales, the primary purpose of legal interventions into th...
This thesis uses a socio-legal methodology to investigate how mental capacity law balances protectio...
This paper explores the distinction between being autonomous and having capacity for the purposes of...
In this paper I present a critical analysis of the English law relating to the safeguarding of vulne...
This paper examines mental capacity as a medico-legal social construct and concludes that, while the...
The UK Mental Capacity Act provides an important legislative framework for protecting persons who ar...
This article engages with emerging debates in law and feminist philosophy around the concept of vuln...
This paper describes how the English courts, in the “heroic act of judicial invention”, have develop...
The author examines theories of citizenship, capacity and choice when supporting vulnerable adults a...
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...
Patients have a right to autonomy that encompasses making medical decisions that others consider ‘ba...
This thesis explores how the law deals with the patient's right to refuse treatment, evaluating the ...
The law’s cliff-edge approach to mental capacity denies those who lack capacity any right to determi...
The High Court continues to exercise its inherent jurisdiction to make declarations about interventi...
According to the High Court in England and Wales, the primary purpose of legal interventions into th...
This thesis uses a socio-legal methodology to investigate how mental capacity law balances protectio...
This paper explores the distinction between being autonomous and having capacity for the purposes of...
In this paper I present a critical analysis of the English law relating to the safeguarding of vulne...
This paper examines mental capacity as a medico-legal social construct and concludes that, while the...
The UK Mental Capacity Act provides an important legislative framework for protecting persons who ar...
This article engages with emerging debates in law and feminist philosophy around the concept of vuln...
This paper describes how the English courts, in the “heroic act of judicial invention”, have develop...
The author examines theories of citizenship, capacity and choice when supporting vulnerable adults a...
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...
Patients have a right to autonomy that encompasses making medical decisions that others consider ‘ba...
This thesis explores how the law deals with the patient's right to refuse treatment, evaluating the ...
The law’s cliff-edge approach to mental capacity denies those who lack capacity any right to determi...