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...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Bristol :
Bristol University Press,
2022.
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Colección: | Law, society, policy series.
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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