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Vulnerable Adults and the Law (Hardcover)
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Vulnerable Adults and the Law (Hardcover)
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We are used to thinking that most people have the capacity to make
their own decisions; that they should be free to decide how to live
their lives; and that it is a good thing to be self-sufficient.
However, in an examination of the legal position of vulnerable
adults, understood as those who have capacity under the Mental
Capacity Act 2005 but are deemed impaired through vulnerability in
their exercise of decision making powers, Jonathan Herring
challenges that assumption. Drawing on feminist and disability
perspectives he argues that we are all in fact, 'vulnerable' and we
need to replace the competent, able-bodied, independent person as
the norm which the law is based on and instead fashion which
recognises our interdependence and mutuality. At the heart of the
law is a distinction between those who have capacity and those who
do not. Those who have capacity are given the full rights of the
law; they are entitled to enter contracts, dispose of their
property, are able to marry. Those who are deemed to lack capacity
are unable to make these decisions. Their decisions are made on
their behalf based on an assessment of what is in their best
interests. This approach is underpinned by the principle of
autonomy, and is problematic for those who are deemed 'vulnerable'.
The Court of Protection and the Court of Appeal have developed a
jurisdiction to deal with cases involving vulnerable adults which
has been used in a wide range of cases from those involving people
with early stage dementia to cases of forced marriage. This
development of law has proved controversial and the courts have
struggled to draw its limits and explain the justification for it.
Jonathan Herring welcomes the courts willingness to protect
vulnerable adults through the inherent jurisdiction, but argues
that we need to go much further. It is not just particular groups
such as 'the elderly' or 'the disabled' who are vulnerable, but
rather vulnerability is part of the human condition. This means
that caring relationships are of central significance to our
society and should be at the heart of the legal system.
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