2019
DOI: 10.1093/medlaw/fwz001
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Competing Professional Knowledge Claims About Mental Capacity in the Court of Protection

Abstract: This article analyses the role of evidence in resolving Court of Protection proceedings, drawing on qualitative data obtained from observations of the Court of Protection, a review of Court of Protection case files and interviews with social workers. It is argued that there is a hierarchy of professional evidence in mental capacity law. Psychiatric evidence is at the top of this hierarchy whereas social work evidence is viewed as a less persuasive form of knowledge about mental capacity. The article argues tha… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…While social workers are sometimes appointed as independent experts, it is much more common for those with psychiatry or clinical psychology expertise to be appointed, despite criticisms of this approach (Lindsey, 2020). While we recognise that social workers may not be the most appropriate "expert" on issues of diagnosis of mental disorder, we argue that social workers are well placed to be instructed as independent experts on best interest decision-making, particularly in welfare cases.…”
Section: Evidence In the Court Of Protectionmentioning
confidence: 85%
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“…While social workers are sometimes appointed as independent experts, it is much more common for those with psychiatry or clinical psychology expertise to be appointed, despite criticisms of this approach (Lindsey, 2020). While we recognise that social workers may not be the most appropriate "expert" on issues of diagnosis of mental disorder, we argue that social workers are well placed to be instructed as independent experts on best interest decision-making, particularly in welfare cases.…”
Section: Evidence In the Court Of Protectionmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Shoesmith (2016) argues that a recurrent emphasis on "incompetence" developed a narrative that social workers are blind-sighted by collusion with the "under-class" and that social work tasks would be better conducted by non-social work personnel who would make rational and, therefore, better decisions (Jones, 2014;Shoesmith, 2016). In the context of our research focus, mental capacity law and adult protection, this "incompetence" narrative is perhaps best contrasted with the narrative of the medical expert, where "doctor knows best" and law's deference to the medical profession is well documented (Lindsey, 2020). While there has been a tendency in some arenas to see mental capacity law as a strata of "medical law", actually many mental capacity disputes involve social care provision by local authorities and social workers are often engaging with questions of capacity in their everyday roles (Keeling, 2017).…”
Section: Social Work Expertisementioning
confidence: 99%
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