ABSTRACT

This book explores the conceptual spaces and socio-legal context which mental capacity laws inhabit. It will be seen that these norms are created and reproduced through the binaries that pervade mental capacity laws in liberal legal jurisdictions- such as capacity/incapacity; autonomy/paternalism; empowerment/protection; carer/cared-for; disabled/non-disabled; public/private. Whilst on one level the book demonstrates the pervasive reach of laws questioning individuals mental capacity, within and beyond the medical context which it is most commonly associated with, at a deeper and perhaps more important level it challenges the underlying norms and assumptions underpinning the very idea of mental capacity, and reflects outwards on the transformative potential of these realisations for other areas of law. In doing so, whilst the book offers lessons for mental capacity law scholarship in terms of reform efforts at both domestic and internationals levels, it also offers ways to develop our understandings of a range of linked legal, policy and theoretical concepts. In so doing, it offers new critical vantage points for both legal critique and conceptual change beyond mental capacity law.

The book will be of interest to researchers in mental capacity law, disability law and socio-legal studies as well as critical geographers and disability studies scholars.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|18 pages

The conceptual terrain

Spatial dynamics and law

chapter 2|23 pages

Spatial dynamics and disability

Interrogating the terrain of the Mental Capacity Act 2005

chapter 3|26 pages

Capacity/incapacity

A dynamic disability critique

chapter 4|28 pages

Care/disability

Challenging the divide through relationality

chapter 5|28 pages

State/individual

Situating the state

chapter 6|29 pages

Freedom/deprivation of liberty

The logics of liberty in mental capacity law

chapter 7|26 pages

Public/private

Dichotomies of powerlessness in the Court of Protection

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion