Universal Legal Capacity for Persons with Disabilities: Will, Preferences and Communication
Universal Legal Capacity for Persons with Disabilities: Will, Preferences and Communication
Date
2022
Authors
Carter, Percy
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Global Campus of Human Rights
Abstract
The right to legal capacity is a fundamental right that allows individuals to be
a person before the law and exercise control over their own lives. For persons
with disabilities, the right to legal capacity has often been restricted through
‘substitute decision-making’ where another individual exercises legal capacity
on their behalf. Article 12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of
Persons with Disabilities seeks to undo the norm of substitute decision-making
by asserting that all persons with disabilities have the right to exercise their
own legal capacity, and should never be stripped of this right. Per article 12,
where persons with disabilities face challenges in exercising their legal capacity,
states parties should rather implement frameworks of supported decisionmaking
which adhere to the will and preferences of the individual. This thesis
is concerned with the expression of will and preferences under frameworks of
supported decision-making, specifically, the expression of will and preferences
by persons with disabilities who have communication support needs and use
varying forms of both verbal and non-verbal communication. This thesis will
explore the interpretation of article 12 regarding supported decision-making,
will and preferences, and communication, and use these considerations to
analyse frameworks of supported decision-making under the Irish Assisted
Decision-Making (Capacity) Act (ADMCA). The purpose of analysing both
article 12 and the ADMCA is to propose a framework for persons tasked with
providing support to persons with disabilities under the Act derived from the
capability approach, a normative framework that re-conceives classic welfarist
notions that the possession of goods and resources were adequate indicators
of justice. Using the capability approach, this thesis will put forth a framework
that may be used by support persons under the ADMCA to determine the most
appropriate method of communication to ascertain the will and preferences of
all persons with disabilities, regardless of their method of communication.
Trigger warning: some of the materials utilised for research in this thesis
contain ableist language and remarks.
Description
Second semester University: Maastricht University.
Keywords
Convention on the Rights of Person with Disabilities. Article 12,
communication,
people with disabilities,
legal status