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Legal Capacity from Perspective of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry Tina Minkowitz Feb. 20, 2010 NHRI Meeting.

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Presentation on theme: "Legal Capacity from Perspective of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry Tina Minkowitz Feb. 20, 2010 NHRI Meeting."— Presentation transcript:

1 Legal Capacity from Perspective of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry Tina Minkowitz Feb. 20, 2010 NHRI Meeting

2 Development of CRPD Article 12 PWD drove the creation of Article 12 International Disability Caucus (IDC) People with psychosocial & intellectual disabilities experienced greatest violation of legal capacity Converged on: full legal capacity plus right to support in making decisions

3 Support Not Substitution From the time of the Working Group text (first text presented for negotiation), IDC agreed: support cannot undermine autonomy This is still reflected in 12.4 – Safeguards shall ensure that measures “respect the rights, will and preferences of the person.”

4 Support Not Substitution 2 Same issue arose with footnote placed in 12.2 and finally removed from the text: – Is legal capacity the “capacity for rights” only or also the “capacity to act”? – “If other people in a society have the capacity to act, PWD have to have it too. That is the meaning of equality.” - government delegate Capacity to act is the right to make one’s own decisions. This includes some degree of responsibility for those decisions.

5 Why Support is a Breakthrough All PWD want full legal capacity Many PWD also want some support in decision- making, but don’t want to have to give up their autonomy to get support Social model of disability allows us to separate provision of support from restriction of autonomy – e.g. consumer-directed personal assistance, etc. Social solidarity supports the autonomy of each individual, no need to sacrifice one or the other

6 Challenges Political: raising awareness of PWD, families, carers, public, legislators, lawyers, human rights community Technical: identifying and solving problems in drafting non- discriminatory law on legal capacity, and identifying good support practices Practical: how to “provide access to support”? Defining support, and role of government, NGOs etc. Philosophical: are there any situations where PWD do not want to give up substituted decision-making? Is there any reason to reconsider the fundamental principles of our advocacy?

7 Rejection of “Functional” Approach A comment on “functional” approach to legal capacity and “mental capacity” laws: – This refers to individual determination of capacity to make particular decisions, rather than denying legal capacity for all purposes to a whole group of PWD – Since limitation in functional ability is one of the elements of disability, a “functional” approach to legal capacity discriminates against PWD – Some instances of this approach specify that “mental capacity” standard only applies to PWD – Especially problematic in mental health field as it amounts to endorsing compulsory treatment if a person “lacks the capacity” to refuse

8 Technical Challenges There is a technical problem: how should the law deal with decisions that may be harmful? That may be the result of exploitation? That the person later regrets? – Traditional approach is, that we can all make bad decisions and have to live with the consequences: except, if we lack the “competence” to make the decision – What are the alternatives? – DPOs have begun to promote disability-neutral approach, e.g. strengthen rights-based approach to informed consent; education; allow people to nullify decisions motivated by need, inexperience, recklessness (as already provided in some countries)

9 Further Information tminkowitz@earthlink.net www.chrusp.org www.wnusp.net www.internationaldisabilityalliance.org


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