توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Deprivation of Liberty in the Shadows of the Institution
نام کتاب : Deprivation of Liberty in the Shadows of the Institution
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : سلب آزادی در سایه نهاد
سری :
نویسندگان : Lucy Series
ناشر : Bristol University Press
سال نشر : 2022
تعداد صفحات : 318
ISBN (شابک) : 9781529212006
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 22 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Front Cover\nTitle page\nCopyright information\nDedication\nTable of contents\nCover Description\nList of abbreviations\nAcknowledgments\nA note on terminology\nSeries editor’s preface\n1 Introduction\n Social care detention: a post-carceral socio-legal phenomenon\n Regulating the ‘invisible asylum’\n About this book\n A note on the COVID-19 pandemic\n2 Distinguishing Social Care Detention\n Locus\n Regulatory form\n Target populations\n Problems, rationalities and legal technologies\n Elongated temporality\n Legal technologies\n Empowerment and vulnerability\n Professionals and expertise\n The role of families\n3 The Law of Institutions\n The law of institutions: a landscape sketch\n Regulating the ‘trade in lunacy’\n Lunacy (law) reform\n Frontiers of resistance\n Domestic psychiatry\n Non-restraint\n Partitioning populations\n ‘Idiots’ and ‘senile dements’ within lunacy law\n Workhouse ‘care’\n Idiots asylums\n Mental deficiency colonies\n4 The Post-carceral Landscape of Care\n Ideologies and reformers\n Scandals\n Sociological critique\n ‘Independent living’ and disability rights\n Opposition to psychiatry\n Normalization\n Person-centred care\n First-wave deinstitutionalization: from medical to social care\n From workhouses to ‘sunshine hotels’\n Marketization and ‘personalization’\n ‘Homes not hospitals’\n Second-wave deinstitutionalization\n Supported living and supported decision making\n Deinstitutionalizing older people?\n The institutional treadmill\n Family-based care\n5 Social Care Detention in Human Rights Law\n Human rights at the end of the carceral era\n The post-carceral turn in international human rights law\n Recognizing social care detention in human rights law\n Social care detention under the ECHR\n Monitoring social care detention\n Abolitionist human rights\n Social care detention and abolitionist human rights\n6 Institution/Home\n Home as territory\n Choice and control over everyday life\n Loss of privacy\n Control of the threshold\n Home as territory in liminal spaces of care\n Home as a centre for self-identity\n Home as a social and cultural unit\n Homes, institutions and families\n Batch living\n Access, inclusion and belonging in community\n The aesthetics of home and institutions\n Liminal places, contested spaces\n Regulating the micro?\n7 Regulatory Tremors\n To ‘informality’ and back again\n Regulating the community\n Defining institutions\n Taming institutions\n Care and capacity law\n The ‘non-volitional’\n The new capacity jurisdiction\n Bournewood: the challenge to informality\n The Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards\n8 The Acid Test\n MIG, MEG and P\n MIG and MEG: reported facts\n P: reported facts\n The contours of liberty before Cheshire West\n Deprivation of liberty as removal from the family and home\n Family life as freedom\n ‘Normality’ and the comparator\n Benevolence: reasons, motivation, purpose\n ‘Objections’ and ambiguity\n Cheshire West in the Supreme Court\n The acid test\n Benevolence\n Objections\n The reverse-comparator: universal human rights\n Dissolving the home/institution boundary\n Responses and backlash\n A victory for human rights?\n Judicial resistance\n Libertarian backlash\n A statutory definition?\n Tremors\n9 Aftermath\n A broken system\n The Liberty Protection Safeguards\n Reconceptualizing ‘deprivation of liberty’ safeguards?\n Three core assessments\n Rationing safeguards\n Aftershocks\n ‘Domestic’ deprivation of liberty\n Children\n Medical treatment\n10 ‘Protecting the Vulnerable’\n Vulnerability and domination\n Social care as a landscape of domination\n Care-professional legalism\n Alternative regulatory strategies\n ‘Substituted consent’, guardianship and adult protection laws\n Second opinion schemes\n Regulating ‘restrictive practices’\n Visiting commissions and inspectorates\n ‘New paradigm’ safeguards?\n11 Out of the Shadows of the Institution?\n The problem-spaces of social care detention\n Beyond the gilded cage?\nReferences\n General comments\n United Nations Treaties and human rights instruments\n Council of Europe Treaties and declarations\n Statutes (UK)\n Statutes (non-UK)\n Secondary legislation (UK)\n Cases (European Court of Human Rights)\n Cases (UK)\n Cases (non-UK)\n Complaints (CRPD Committee)\n Works Cited\nIndex\nBack Cover