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International Human Rights and Mental Disability Law Michael L. Perlin (Professor of Law and Director of the Mental Disability Law Program, Professor of Law and Director of the Mental Disability Law Program, New York Law School)

International Human Rights and Mental Disability Law By Michael L. Perlin (Professor of Law and Director of the Mental Disability Law Program, Professor of Law and Director of the Mental Disability Law Program, New York Law School)

Summary

Examining the mistreatment of persons with mental disabilities around the world, Michael Perlin identifies universal factors that contaminate mental disability law, including lack of comprehensive legislation and of independent counsel; inadequate care; poor or nonexistent community programming; and inhumane forensic systems.

International Human Rights and Mental Disability Law Summary

International Human Rights and Mental Disability Law: When the Silenced are Heard by Michael L. Perlin (Professor of Law and Director of the Mental Disability Law Program, Professor of Law and Director of the Mental Disability Law Program, New York Law School)

Society is largely blind-often willfully blind-to the ongoing violations of international human rights law when it comes to the treatment of persons with mental disabilities. Despite a robust set of international law principles, standards and doctrines, and the recent ratification of the United Nations' Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, people with mental disabilities continue to live in some of the harshest conditions that exist in any society. These conditions are the product of neglect, lack of legal protection against improper and abusive treatment, and social attitudes that demean, trivialize and ignore the humanity of persons with disabilities. International Human Rights and Mental Disability Law: When the Silenced are Heard draws attention to these issues in order to shed light on deplorable conditions that governments continue to ignore, and to invigorate the debate on a social policy issue that remains a low priority for most of the world's nations. Examining the mistreatment of persons with mental disabilities around the world, Michael Perlin identifies universal factors that contaminate mental disability law, including lack of comprehensive legislation and of independent counsel; inadequate care; poor or nonexistent community programming; and inhumane forensic systems. Using examples from Western and Eastern Europe, South America, Africa and Asia, Perlin examines and summarizes the growing field of international mental health law, arguing that governmental inaction demeans human dignity, denies personal autonomy, and disregards the most authoritative and comprehensive prescription of human rights obligations. As Perlin argues, these issues pertain to all citizens of the world who value human rights and who care about how we treat those of us who may be most vulnerable. International Human Rights and Mental Disability Law is an indispensable resource for scholars, policymakers, governmental officials, and mental health professionals who care about the treatment of those with disabilities, and to human rights advocates and activists worldwide.

International Human Rights and Mental Disability Law Reviews

International Human rights and Mental Disability Law: When the Silenced Are Heard is the definitive text on the analysis of international law, treaties, protocols, covenants, and conventions regarding mental disability issues. Although a treasure to foreign and international teachers and practitioners, Professor Perlin's book also focuses on areas-- such as sanism and pretextuality-- that may provide some insight for domestic criminal defense and mental health lawyers... I strongly recommend this book to anyone practicing criminal law or working with mental health issues. Professor Perlin wrote it for the international lawyer audience, but he has let some light shine through for all of us. -- Robert M. Sanger, Vice President of California Attorneys for Criminal Justice, The Champion While the author has written extensively in the past on domestic issues in the US, he has broadened his analytical lens to focus on the current relationship between international human rights law and mental disability law. Perlin thoroughly reviews international human rights law and evaluates mental disability legal doctrine in a comparative law context. He moves on to define the issues that must be addressed in order to safeguard the human rights of the mentally disabled on an international scale, namely the lack of comprehensive legislation, lack of independent counsel, inadequate care, lack of community programming, and inhumane forensic systems. Perlin's social, political, and legal analysis of rightsbased international mental disability law and its applications addresses the gap in the protection of the human rights of the mentally disabled around the globe. -- Health and Human Rights

About Michael L. Perlin (Professor of Law and Director of the Mental Disability Law Program, Professor of Law and Director of the Mental Disability Law Program, New York Law School)

Michael L. Perlin is a professor of law at New York Law School, where he is also Director of the International Mental Disability Law Reform Project and Director of the Online Mental Disability Law Program. He has taught and done advocacy work on six continents and is the author of 20 books and over 200 articles on all aspects of mental disability law. He spent eight years as director of the New Jersey Division of Mental Health Advocacy, where he provided legal services to individuals in cases involving civil commitment, institutional rights, and community care issues.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Introduction and overview ; Chapter 2: International human rights: Legal issues and social constructs ; International human rights in legal perspective ; Sanism and pretextuality ; Dignity ; Chapter 3: Mental disability law in a comparative law context ; Chapter 4: The use of mental disability law to suppress political dissent ; Chapter 5: The universal factors ; Chapter 6: The application of international human rights law to mental disability law: specific contexts ; Law school pedagogy ; Expert evidence law ; Psychotherapist-patient law ; Corrections law ; Chapter 7: The UN Convention: The impact of the new UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities on international mental disability law ; Chapter 8: The UN Convention: The role of counsel ; Chapter 9: A Disability Rights Tribunal for Asia and the Pacific ; Chapter 10: Therapeutic Jurisprudence ; Chapter 11: Conclusion ; References ; Index

Additional information

NPB9780195393231
9780195393231
0195393236
International Human Rights and Mental Disability Law: When the Silenced are Heard by Michael L. Perlin (Professor of Law and Director of the Mental Disability Law Program, Professor of Law and Director of the Mental Disability Law Program, New York Law School)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2011-09-22
352
N/A
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