Available Formats
Compulsory Mental Health Interventions and the CRPD: Minding Equality
By (Author) Anna Nilsson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
15th April 2021
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
344.044
Hardback
200
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
458g
This book delineates the scope of permissible compulsory mental health interventions under the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD). The initial impetus for this study was provided by a conflict between two competing positions within the current debate over the future of coercive psychiatry. According to one position, defended by the CRPD Committee, among others, compulsory mental health care necessarily violates the prohibition of discrimination. According to the competing position, supported by the vast majority of states, compulsion is sometimes necessary to protect health and life and, if coupled with appropriate legal safeguards, it is lawful under such circumstances. This book disputes both positions and argues that the scope of permissible compulsory care can be identified using proportionality reasoning. Drawing on the work of Robert Alexy, it develops a framework for proportionality assessments within the context of non-discrimination. The framework can assist decision-makers to design principled and evidence-based mental health care regimes. This book thus provides a new way forward for states parties looking to reform their mental health care regimes and to improve compliance with the CRPD. It will appeal to academics and practitioners engaged in mental health reform in the post-CRPD era.
A very useful tool for those who might be seeking to design principled and evidence-based mental health care regimes, because it provides a helpful set of measures against which to stress test both legislation and policies. -- Alex Ruck Keene * International Journal of Mental Health and Capacity Law *
Anna Nilsson is Postdoctoral Fellow at the Faculty of Law, Lund University.