Description |
1 online resource (1 PDF file (xv, 299 pages)). |
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text txt rdacontent |
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computer c rdamedia |
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online resource cr rdacarrier |
Series |
Law, society, policy series |
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Law, society, policy series.
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Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Summary |
During the 20th century the locus of care shifted from large institutions into the community. However, this shift was not always accompanied by liberation from restrictive practices. In 2014 a UK Supreme Court ruling on the meaning of 'deprivation of liberty' resulted in large numbers of older and disabled people in care homes, supported living and family homes being re-categorized as 'detained'. Placing this ruling in its social, historical and global context, 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 Cheshire West ruling's paradoxical implications. |
Note |
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (viewed July 21, 2023). |
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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
Access |
Open Access EbpS |
Subject |
People with disabilities -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- Great Britain.
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Social service -- Great Britain.
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Detention of persons -- Great Britain.
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Social service.
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Institutionalization |
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Disabled Persons -- legislation & jurisprudence |
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Social Work |
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United Kingdom |
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Service social -- Grande-Bretagne.
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Service social.
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Law & society.
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LAW / General.
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Detention of persons
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People with disabilities -- Legal status, laws, etc.
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Social service
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Great Britain https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJdmp7p3cx8hpmJ8HvmTpP
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Other Form: |
Print version: Series, Lucy Deprivation of Liberty in the Shadows of the Institution Bristol : Bristol University Press,c2022 9781529208382 |
ISBN |
9781529212006 (OA PDF) |
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1529212006 |
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9781529212013 (OA ePub) |
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1529212014 |
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9781529211993 (paperback) |
Standard No. |
AU@ 000074221295 |
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AU@ 000073973008 |
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AU@ 000071451237 |
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NLM 9918644385106676 |
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