Mental Health Tribunals as Governance: Lessons from an Australian Study?
Dublin University Law Journal, Forthcoming
36 Pages Posted: 3 Feb 2011
Date Written: February 1, 2011
Abstract
This article draws on a multi-year Australian collaborative study of mental health review tribunals in three jurisdictions (Victoria, New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory) undertaken in conjunction with the NSW Law and Justice Foundation, using qualitative and quantitative methods to examine the role of mental health tribunals in advancing goals such as fairness, legality and access to treatment. In recognition of shrinkage of state resources available for treatment and care of the mentally ill in many jurisdictions, and limited time and resources for review bodies, the article reflects on stakeholder and client concerns about access to quality treatment and associated support services, review of treatment adequacy and drug regimes, and their ‘participation’ or dignity of engagement in review processes. Building on earlier arguments in favour of equipping tribunals to adequately engage the clinical and social domains in addition to the domain of ‘legal rectitude’, and for ‘flexibility’ of process more characteristic of case-conferencing modes, this article examines the implications of such findings for the interests of clients and overall ‘governance’ in mental health.
Keywords: mental health tribunals, governance, socio-legal evaluation, case-conference, stakeholder views
JEL Classification: K10, K30, K32
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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