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Deprivation of liberty in the shadows of the institution /

During the 20th century the locus of care shifted from large institutions into the community. However, this shift was not always accompanied by liberation from restrictive practices. In 2014 a UK Supreme Court ruling on the meaning of 'deprivation of liberty' resulted in large numbers of o...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Series, Lucy (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Bristol : Bristol University Press, 2022.
Colección:Law, society, policy series.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Front Cover
  • Title page
  • Copyright information
  • Dedication
  • Table of contents
  • Cover Description
  • List of abbreviations
  • Acknowledgments
  • A note on terminology
  • Series editor's preface
  • 1 Introduction
  • Social care detention: a post-carceral socio-legal phenomenon
  • Regulating the 'invisible asylum'
  • About this book
  • A note on the COVID-19 pandemic
  • 2 Distinguishing Social Care Detention
  • Locus
  • Regulatory form
  • Target populations
  • Problems, rationalities and legal technologies
  • Elongated temporality
  • Legal technologies
  • Empowerment and vulnerability
  • Professionals and expertise
  • The role of families
  • 3 The Law of Institutions
  • The law of institutions: a landscape sketch
  • Regulating the 'trade in lunacy'
  • Lunacy (law) reform
  • Frontiers of resistance
  • Domestic psychiatry
  • Non-restraint
  • Partitioning populations
  • 'Idiots' and 'senile dements' within lunacy law
  • Workhouse 'care'
  • Idiots asylums
  • Mental deficiency colonies
  • 4 The Post-carceral Landscape of Care
  • Ideologies and reformers
  • Scandals
  • Sociological critique
  • 'Independent living' and disability rights
  • Opposition to psychiatry
  • Normalization
  • Person-centred care
  • First-wave deinstitutionalization: from medical to social care
  • From workhouses to 'sunshine hotels'
  • Marketization and 'personalization'
  • 'Homes not hospitals'
  • Second-wave deinstitutionalization
  • Supported living and supported decision making
  • Deinstitutionalizing older people?
  • The institutional treadmill
  • Family-based care
  • 5 Social Care Detention in Human Rights Law
  • Human rights at the end of the carceral era
  • The post-carceral turn in international human rights law
  • Recognizing social care detention in human rights law
  • Social care detention under the ECHR
  • Monitoring social care detention
  • Abolitionist human rights
  • Social care detention and abolitionist human rights
  • 6 Institution/Home
  • Home as territory
  • Choice and control over everyday life
  • Loss of privacy
  • Control of the threshold
  • Home as territory in liminal spaces of care
  • Home as a centre for self-identity
  • Home as a social and cultural unit
  • Homes, institutions and families
  • Batch living
  • Access, inclusion and belonging in community
  • The aesthetics of home and institutions
  • Liminal places, contested spaces
  • Regulating the micro?
  • 7 Regulatory Tremors
  • To 'informality' and back again
  • Regulating the community
  • Defining institutions
  • Taming institutions
  • Care and capacity law
  • The 'non-volitional'
  • The new capacity jurisdiction
  • Bournewood: the challenge to informality
  • The Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards
  • 8 The Acid Test
  • MIG, MEG and P
  • MIG and MEG: reported facts
  • P: reported facts
  • The contours of liberty before Cheshire West
  • Deprivation of liberty as removal from the family and home
  • Family life as freedom
  • 'Normality' and the comparator