Slobogin Christopher
Vanderbilt University Law School, 131 21st Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37203, United States.
Int J Law Psychiatry. 2015 May-Jun;40:36-42. doi: 10.1016/j.ijlp.2015.04.011. Epub 2015 May 8.
A number of laws that are associated with deprivations of liberty, including the insanity defense, civil commitment, guardianship of the person and numerous competency doctrines in the criminal context, require proof of mental disability as a predicate. The Convention on the Rights of Persons With Disabilities commands signatory states to eliminate that predicate. Summarizing principles set out in my book Minding Justice: Laws That Deprive People With Mental Disability of Life and Liberty, I explain how this seemingly radical stance can be implemented. Specifically, this article proposes adoption of an "integrationist defense" in the criminal context, an "undeterrability requirement" when the state seeks preventive detention outside of the criminal process, and a "basic rationality and self-regard test" for incompetency determinations. None of these proposals requires proof of a mental disorder as a predicate condition.
一些与剥夺自由相关的法律,包括精神错乱抗辩、民事收容、人身监护以及刑事背景下的众多行为能力判定原则,都要求证明精神残疾作为前提条件。《残疾人权利公约》要求签署国消除这一前提条件。总结我在《关注正义:剥夺精神残疾者生命和自由的法律》一书中阐述的原则,我解释了这种看似激进的立场如何得以实施。具体而言,本文提议在刑事背景下采用“融合主义抗辩”,在国家寻求刑事程序之外的预防性拘留时采用“不可威慑性要求”,以及在判定无行为能力时采用“基本理性和自我尊重测试”。这些提议均不要求证明精神障碍作为前提条件。