Freshly Printed - allow 6 days lead
Mental Capacity in Relationship
Decision-Making, Dialogue, and Autonomy
An interdisciplinary text that investigates mental capacity and considers how relationships can affect an individual's ability to make decisions.
Camillia Kong (Author)
9781316615706, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 6 December 2018
275 pages, 1 b/w illus.
23 x 15.3 x 1.3 cm, 0.41 kg
'Camillia Kong's book, Mental Capacity in Relationship, is an important contribution to debates over mental capacity. It combines philosophical, psychological and legal materials in an effective and stimulating discussion of the topic. It is particularly timely given the debates over the nature of the capacity in light of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. It is an excellent, sophisticated, analysis of the issues.' Jonathan Herring, Legal Studies
Recent legal developments challenge how valid the concept of mental capacity is in determining whether individuals with impairments can make decisions about their care and treatment. Kong defends a concept of mental capacity but argues that such assessments must consider how relationships and dialogue can enable or disable the decision-making abilities of these individuals. This is thoroughly investigated using an interdisciplinary approach that combines philosophy and legal analysis of the law in England and Wales, the European Court of Human Rights, and the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. By exploring key concepts underlying mental capacity, the investigation concludes that both primary relationships and capacity assessments themselves must display key competencies to ensure that autonomy skills are promoted and encouraged. This ultimately provides scope for justifiable interventions into disabling relationships and articulates the dialogical practices that help better situate, interpret, and understand the choices and actions of individuals with impairments.
1. Problems with mental capacity
2. Mental capacity, legal capacity, and relational rights
3. Relational autonomy and the promotion of decisional capacity
4. Procedural reasoning and the social space of reasons in capacity assessments
5. Ethical duties of support and intervention
6. Hermeneutic competence and the dialogical conditions of capacity
7. Rethinking capacity.
Subject Areas: Family & relationships [VFV], Mental health law [LNTM1], Medical & healthcare law [LNTM], Care of the mentally ill [JKSM], Ethics & moral philosophy [HPQ], Philosophy of mind [HPM], Decision theory: general [GPQ]