Legal Capacity and Support

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Legal Capacity is the fulcrum of rights under the CRPD. Legal capacity means being recognized as the decision-maker about one’s life, finances, health, relationships, and all other personal choices. This is important to defend ourselves against forced psychiatric interventions and exercise our rights in all aspects of life.

Article 12 is where the right to legal capacity is found in the CRPD and the monitoring body’s General Comment No. 1 (2014) (with a small but important Correction) gives detail about how it has to be implemented.

  • People with disability have same right to legal capacity as others
  • Legal capacity cannot be restricted because of a person’s ‘mental capacity’ or apparent decision-making skills
  • When it’s not possible to determine a person’s actual will, after significant effort including support and accommodations, a ‘best interpretation’ of the person’s will can be made when necessary
  • Legal capacity exists at all time including in crisis situations
  • Forced psychiatric interventions violate legal capacity as well as the rights to liberty and freedom from torture/ill-treatment
  • People have a right to use support in exercising legal capacity
  • Support cannot be imposed against a person’s will
  • Supporters must respect the person’s will and preferences and be free from conflict of interest or undue influence
  • Though not mentioned in the General Comment, both civil and criminal responsibility are linked to legal capacity as the capacity to be held accountable for fulfilling legal duties