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Deprivation of liberty in the shadows of the institution / Lucy Series.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Series, Lucy, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Detention of persons--Great Britain.
Detention of persons.
Human rights--Great Britain.
Human rights.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (xv, 299 pages)
Place of Publication:
Bristol : Bristol University Press, 2022.
Language Note:
In English.
Summary:
This book presents a socio-legal analysis of social care detention in the post-carceral era. Drawing from disability rights law and the meanings of 'home' and 'institution' it proposes solutions to the paradoxical implications of the 2014 UK Supreme Court ruling on the meaning of 'deprivation of liberty'.
Contents:
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.
Notes:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

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