1 / 18

The Ethics of Legal Capacity : Protection from Harm and Enhancing Autonomy

The Ethics of Legal Capacity : Protection from Harm and Enhancing Autonomy. A presentation to the AABHL Conference Auckland, July 2012 Alison Douglass, Barrister Lynne Bowyer, Bioethics Centre, University of O tago. Overview.

kim
Télécharger la présentation

The Ethics of Legal Capacity : Protection from Harm and Enhancing Autonomy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Ethics of Legal Capacity:Protection from Harm and Enhancing Autonomy A presentation to the AABHL Conference Auckland, July 2012 Alison Douglass, Barrister Lynne Bowyer, Bioethics Centre, University of Otago A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012

  2. Overview • fundamentally relational understanding of autonomy and personhood • implications for the understanding of legal capacity, assessment and decision-making A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012

  3. Dominant view of autonomy • rational, self-conscious individual • capable of directing her own life based on a process of rational reflection • unimpeded by the choices and actions of others. • devoid of relational obligations or any ethically informed historical tradition. • separateness and individualism A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012

  4. A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012 embodied discursive beings fundamentally interdependent embedded in socio-cultural networks of shared meaningful practices at a particular place and time.

  5. A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012 Autonomy - enacting and sustaining meaningful and coherent patterns of activity that rightfully position us in our shared world.

  6. Contextual understanding Pre-reflective Embodied interaction A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012

  7. A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012 normative interactions inform the way that we live constitute our interests on-going interactions reflect our interests others come to recognise the values that we live by

  8. Autonomy • normatively informed • context specific • on-going • interdependent • enhanced or diminished by others A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012

  9. Capacity and legal significance Legal protection from harm for those that are vulnerable due to diminished capacity A relational approach to autonomy can enhance and support decision-making: • the capacity assessment process • care and welfare decisions made in a person’s “best interests” A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012

  10. Right to refuse medical treatment • NZBORA “Everyone…(who has capacity) has the right to refuse medical treatment • English cases Re TcfRe C • Capacity becomes an issue when we disagree with the nature of the decision A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012

  11. Legal capacity and decision-making • Mental illness and refusal to consent to treatment • Dementia and family conflict between siblings over supporting parent/diminished ability to care for self • Intellectual disability and vulnerability to undue influence/abusive relationships A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012

  12. Protection of Personal and Property Rights Act 1988 • Legal framework in New Zealand for assessing a person’s capacity to make care and welfare decisions • An act to protect and promote a person’s rights • EPOA, appointment of Welfare Guardian and personal “one-off” Court orders make decisions in a person’s best interests A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012

  13. PPPR Act – Primary objectives Section 8: • To make the least restrictive intervention possible …having regard to the degree of that person’s incapacity: • To encourage the person to exercise and develop such capacity he/she has to the greatest extent possible A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012

  14. Legal test Whether a person: “… lacks wholly (or partly) the capacity to understand the nature and to foresee the consequences of decisions in respect of matters relating to his or her personal care and welfare”; or “…whollylacks the capacity to communicate decisions..” A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012

  15. Factors • Understanding relevant information; • Manipulate information; • Appreciate the consequences, and • Expressing a choice A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012

  16. Capacity assessment • Functional approach Objective – diagnostic threshold/cognitive functions Subjective –task, time, and situation specific • Procedural fairness – Court appointed lawyer A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012

  17. Best Interests • A measure of good practice? • Relies on the assumption that there is a shared view of what is in a person’s “best interests” • Balance between a person’s expressed wishes and reasonable treatment/response A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012

  18. The Ethics of Legal Capacity • Robust and procedurally fair assessment that a person meets the legal threshold • “Best Interests” test requires an understanding of all dimensions of a person’s social situation and relationships • Relational autonomy is an approach to understanding how to apply the law A Douglass and L Bowyer; The Ethics of Legal Capacity AABHL Conference July 2012

More Related