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E-raamat: Reimagining the Court of Protection: Access to Justice in Mental Capacity Law

(University of Essex)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Cambridge Bioethics and Law
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Sep-2022
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781108999250
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Cambridge Bioethics and Law
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Sep-2022
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781108999250

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As one of the first researchers authorised to observe hearings and access court files at the Court of Protection, Jaime Lindsey offers an original account and analysis of the workings of this court. Using data collected with the approval from the senior judiciary of the Court of Protection and the Ministry of Justice, this innovative book combines empirical data with theoretical and normative analysis. It takes a socio-legal approach to understanding how the Mental Capacity Act operates in practice to achieve access to justice and situates current debates within an international context, showing how other jurisdictions have been guided by the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Furthering scholarship across several fields including access to justice, healthcare law and procedural justice theory, this is a timely and pioneering book that argues for a reimagining of the Court of Protection.

This innovative book combines original, rare empirical data with theoretical and normative analysis about the Court of Protection. It furthers scholarship across several fields including access to justice, procedural justice, mental capacity and social welfare and family law.

Arvustused

'[ This volume] does an excellent job in writing people with impaired capacity into socio-legal discourse on access to justice. It also showcases the essential contribution of socio-legal methodologies in informing ongoing debates in disability and capacity law.' Mary Donnelly, Journal of Law and Society

Muu info

Combines original empirical data with theoretical and normative analysis of access to justice in the Court of Protection.
List of Figures
ix
List of Tables
x
Acknowledgements xi
Table of Statutes
xii
Table of Cases
xiii
1 Introduction
1(34)
Reimagining the Court of Protection
5(1)
Mental Capacity, Disability and Access to Justice
6(13)
Study Design and Methodology
19(13)
Voices in the Empirical Data
32(1)
Chapter Outlines
33(2)
2 Procedural Justice
35(32)
Justice in the Court of Protection: Procedural versus Substantive Requirements
37(10)
A Procedural Justice Framework of Values
47(19)
Conclusion
66(1)
3 Participation and Voice
67(31)
The Person's Participation: Values, Evidence and Justifications
68(20)
Ways of Securing Participation
88(9)
Conclusion
97(1)
4 Mediating Disputes
98(50)
Mediation in the Court of Protection
99(20)
Lay versus Legal Perceptions of Justice in Mediation
119(11)
Securing Procedural Justice through Mediation
130(16)
Conclusion
146(2)
5 Expert and Experiential Evidence
148(41)
Evidence and the MCA
149(5)
Hierarchies of Knowledge
154(24)
Evidence and the Access to Justice Problem
178(7)
The Procedural Justice Response
185(3)
Conclusion
188(1)
6 The Courtroom Space and Design
189(30)
The Court Space and Its Impact on Justice
190(25)
Design Thinking and Reimagining
215(2)
Conclusion
217(2)
7 Conclusions: Designing for Access to Justice
219(22)
Embodied Perspectives and Procedural Justice
220(2)
Reimagining
222(2)
Collaboration for Better Design
224(3)
References
227(14)
Index 241
Jaime Lindsey is Senior Lecturer at the School of Law at the University of Essex. Her research interests include healthcare law, mental capacity and adult safeguarding law, access to justice and dispute resolution. She adopts an empirical socio-legal approach to the study of these areas of law. Jaime Lindsey is a member of the SLSA and is a non-practising solicitor. She is also an Academic Fellow of the Middle Temple.