1 / 14

The right to legal capacity: guardianship at the ECHR

The right to legal capacity: guardianship at the ECHR. Jan Fiala Disability Rights Center (DRC) Budapest, Hungary. The right to legal capacity: guardianship at the ECHR. 1. Human rights implications of guardianship 2. What is happening in practice

parson
Download Presentation

The right to legal capacity: guardianship at the ECHR

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The right to legal capacity:guardianship at the ECHR Jan Fiala Disability Rights Center (DRC) Budapest, Hungary

  2. The right to legal capacity: guardianship at the ECHR • 1. Human rights implications of guardianship • 2. What is happening in practice • 3. How does current ECHR standards help us to reach the level of the CRPD?

  3. Human rights implications 1 – procedural problems • People not heard by courts • No meaningful legal representation • Decisions not delivered • Restrictions on the access to court • Open prejudice by judges • Experts assessment – determines the outcome

  4. Human rights implications 2 – abuses • People institutionalised through guardianship • Subjected to (in)voluntary treatment through guardianship • Property taken over by adverse parties • No control over the guardian’s actions • Overuse of guardianship and plenary guardianship in particular

  5. Human rights implications 3 – implications for other rights • Right to vote • Right to family life (adoption of own child) • Right to assembly • Access to courts • Right to property • Freedom from torture (ECT)

  6. Human rights implications 4 – The right to legal capacity • If all the previous problems were corrected, would guardianship be acceptable? • When is guardianship a legitimate intervention?

  7. What is happening? • No legal standard of capacity (CEE) • No psychiatric methodology for the assessment of capacity • Determining factors: luck, social situation, diagnosis-based prejudice

  8. What is the aim of guardianship? • It is seen as an automatic, natural thing to impose without much thought given to the reasons • It is a means of intervention in social crises situations • The reasons are often unrelated to the person’s abilities (death of carers, requirements of service providers)

  9. Current ECHR standards • Prohibition of plenary guardianship – Shtukaturov v. Russia, Alajos Kiss v. Hungary, X v. Croatia • Sometimes the aims get questioned – Salontaji-Drobnjak v. Serbia

  10. Where can we move? • Disability neutral alternatives – Adult Protection Laws • Less restrictive alternatives: lasting powers of attorney, advance directives, supported decision-making

  11. Where can we move? • Positive obligations – to provide personal support services to deal with daily matters of an independent life • Services necessary to deal with “legal” matters (applying for job and social benefits, dealing with public administration) • Specific services to assess less restrictive alternatives

  12. How do we do that? • Litigation: cases before the ECHR • Law reform: good examples from Central Europe and elsewhere

  13. Starting point • Imagine a World without restrictions on legal capacity • How would it look like? • What kind of problems would we run into? • Let’s look for solutions to those problems

  14. The right to legal capacity:guardianship and the ECHRThank you for your attention! • Jan Fiala • jfiala@freemail.hu • Disability Rights Center (DRC) Budapest, Hungary

More Related