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Quasi-coerced treatment ethical aspects Pompidou Group Dialog between the two Plateforms Criminal Justice and Ethics René Padieu, September 10 th, 2009
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Quasi-coerced treatments - ethics2 For a dialog about ethics Following the Cavtat meeting (October 2008) 1.What is ethics about ? 2.Some issues
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1 What is ethics about ?
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Quasi-coerced treatments - ethics4 What is ethics about ? [1] We obey a multitude of rules Explicit or implicit Moral code or formal law Ranging from civilisation principles to practical guidelines Which vary according to contexts (cultural, professional, …)
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Quasi-coerced treatments - ethics5 What is ethics about ? [2] Those diverse rules often contradict Every body casts his own balance between those rules and seeks to impose it Ethics, on the contrary, invites us to : Take into account the other points of view Examine the foundation of our own rules
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Quasi-coerced treatments - ethics6 Those unavoidable contradictions are settled through decisions, laws or conventions, which can have neither universal nor definitive validity… They are bound to contest, though legitimate or not Ethical reflexion aims at solving such disputes – casually at preventing them What is ethics about ? [3]
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Quasi-coerced treatments - ethics7 The “Ethics” platform does not aim at telling which rules or actions are acceptable or not, but invites the players (including those of the Justice PF) to question themselves about - the founding, - the consequences and - the interactions of the rules ( R ) that guide their actions. What is ethics about ? [4] R ? R RR R ? R
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2 Some ethical issues
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Quasi-coerced treatments - ethics9 Some ethical issues [1] Punishment (prison…) may serve several purposes: repayment for offence against public order / protection of society / rehabilitation and reintegration of the offender. While choosing it, is it clear which of those the goal is sought? Then, does one keep in mind other values and goals ?
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Quasi-coerced treatments - ethics10 Some ethical issues [2] How do - free will and responsibility, - alienated mind due to addiction, - consent to the treatment fit together ?
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Quasi-coerced treatments - ethics11 Some ethical issues [3] Dual status delinquent / diseased : various penal or treatment paths. Who evaluates – and on which groundings – the opportunity of those different paths? Is any drug user sent to treatment ? Or only addict persons?
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Quasi-coerced treatments - ethics12 Some ethical issues [4] Co-operation between justice and medicine. Are there shared goals ? How substituting the doctor to the judge is understood? Do doctors and judges, respectively, support compulsory treatment? What about follow up and reporting?
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Quasi-coerced treatments - ethics13 Some ethical issues [5] How do the two institutions (Justice and Medicine) understand that our societies refer to them for dealing with personality disorders ?
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Quasi-coerced treatments - ethics14 General remark The drug issue is extremely complex Each people or organisation inclines to reduce the problems to what is more meaningful to them How can we avoid disregarding that material complexity and encompass it all?
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Quasi-coerced treatments - ethics15 …by way of no-conclusion The above listed questions are given here as mere examples Only a collective reflexion shall lead to some appropriate questioning. thank you for contributing
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