Deinstitutionalization as Reparative Justice: A Commentary on the Guidelines on Deinstitutionalization, including in Emergencies
Abstract
:Introduction
Reparative Justice … centers those who have been harmed, and focuses on repairing past harms, stopping present harm, and preventing the reproduction of harm.
Deinstitutionalization reverses the unjust practice of institutionalization.
States Parties should ensure that institutional staff are trained on a human-rights, reparative and person-centred meaning of deinstitutionalization.
Be respected as survivors to whom reparations are due and be provided with information and opportunities to participate fully in the planning and implementation of deinstitutionalization, truth commissions and reparations.
1. Purpose and Process
2. Duties of States
3. Understanding and Implementing Key Elements of Deinstitutionalization Processes
There are certain defining elements of an institution, such as obligatory sharing of assistants with others and no or limited influence as to who provides the assistance; isolation and segregation from independent life in the community; lack of control over day-to-day decisions; lack of choice for the individuals concerned over with whom they live; rigidity of routine irrespective of personal will and preferences; identical activities in the same place for a group of individuals under a certain authority; a paternalistic approach in service provision; supervision of living arrangements; and a disproportionate number of persons with disabilities in the same environment.
Disability-specific detention typically occurs in institutions that include, but are not limited to, social care institutions, psychiatric institutions, long-stay hospitals, nursing homes, secure dementia wards, special boarding schools, rehabilitation centres other than community-based, half-way homes, group homes, family-type homes for children, sheltered or protected living homes, forensic psychiatric settings, transit homes, albinism hostels, leprosy colonies and other congregate settings.
Mental health settings where a person can be deprived of their liberty for purposes such as observation, care or treatment and/or preventive detention are a form of institutionalization.
Institutionalization of persons with disabilities refers to any detention based on disability alone or in conjunction with other grounds such as “care” or “treatment”.
[S]ettings where adults with disabilities continue to be subjected to substituted decision-making or to compulsory treatment, or where they have shared assistants; settings located “in the community” where service providers set a routine and deny autonomy; or “homes” where the same service provider packages housing and support together.
… peer support, supportive caregivers for children in family settings, crisis support, support for communication, support for mobility, provision of assistive technology, support in securing housing and household help, and other community-based services, [along with] support … to gain access to and use mainstream services such as education, employment, the justice system and healthcare.
Housing should be neither under the control of the mental health system or other service providers that have managed institutions nor conditioned on acceptance of medical treatment or specific support services.
4. Deinstitutionalization Grounded in the Dignity and Diversity of Persons with Disabilities
A healthy living arrangement should allow a child to establish a stable relationship with a committed adult caregiver, and every effort should be made to avoid multiple placements of children who do not live with their family of origin.
5. Enabling Legal and Policy Frameworks
6. Inclusive Community Support Services, Systems, and Networks
Peer support should be self-directed, independent of institutions and medical professionals, and autonomously organized by persons with disabilities. It is especially important for survivors of institutionalization, and in the interest of consciousness-raising, supported decision-making, crisis support and crisis respite, living independently, empowerment, income generation, political participation, and/or participating in social activities.
Community-based organizations, individuals and neighbourhood groups may play a diversified role in the provision of social support, connecting persons to local resources, or provide support as a member of the broader social capital of the community.
States parties should ensure that options outside the health-care system, that fully respect the individual’s self-knowledge, will and preferences, are made available as primary services without the need for mental health diagnosis or treatment in the individual’s own community. Such options should meet requirements for support related to distress or unusual perceptions, including crisis support, decision-making support on a long-term, intermittent or emergent basis, support to heal from trauma, and other support needed to live in the community and to enjoy solidarity and companionship.
7. Access to Mainstream Services on an Equal Basis with Others
8. Emergency Deinstitutionalization in Situations of Risk and Humanitarian Emergencies, including Conflicts
9. Remedies, Reparations, and Redress
10. Disaggregated Data
Data collected by States parties should be disaggregated according to race, ethnic origin, age, gender, sex, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, type of impairment, reason for institutionalization, date of admission, expected or actual date of release, and other attributes.
This includes collection of reliable, accessible and up-to-date records concerning the numbers and demographics of persons in psychiatric or mental health settings, records of whether the duty to allow persons with disabilities to leave institutions has been fulfilled, the number of persons who have exercised the option of leaving, and other information concerning planning for those who are yet to leave institutions.
facilitate the participation of persons with disabilities, and their representative organizations, in relevant data collection processes and exercises, such as defining data collection priorities, identifying persons with disabilities and providing information on their circumstances and requirements.
11. Monitoring Deinstitutionalization Processes
Where children or adults are in institutions and are unable to file complaints themselves, national human rights institutions and advocacy organizations may be authorized to take legal action. This should only happen based on the person’s free and informed consent or, when the person’s rights are at stake and it has not been feasible to obtain an expression of will from the person, despite real efforts based on a best interpretation of the will and preferences of the person concerned.
12. International Cooperation
13. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | Guidelines on Deinstitutionalization, Including in Emergencies, CRPD/C/5 (2021) [hereafter DI Guidelines], paras 53 and 115–123. |
2 | For an excellent theoretical survey and examination, see Margaret Urban Walker (2015). |
3 | |
4 | See Chinkin (2001); see also for primary source materials Women’s International War Crimes Tribunal Archives (n.d.). |
5 | See Kaba and Ritchie (2022), pp. 131–39 for an analogous approach in a related social justice movement. See also sources in note 227 for the conceptualization of reparations in the survivor of psychiatric oppression movement and note 8 for its use in advocacy related to these Guidelines. |
6 | Basic Principles and Guidelines on the Right to a Remedy and Reparation for Victims of Gross Violations of International Human Rights Law and Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law, A/RES/60/147 (2005) [‘Basic Principles and Guidelines on Reparation’], paras 18–23. See also notes 32–33, 37, 38–40, 59–61, 65–66, 72, 82, 107, 110–122, 125–128, 129–130, 152–155, 167, 173–176, 180–195, 196–198, 200–201, 204–205, 206–210, 257, 271–272, 277–278 and 280, and their accompanying text (calling attention to the forms of reparation corresponding to particular measures) and the discussion of Section 9. (Note that there are many other provisions that can be analyzed as reparative, even where I have not made this explicit.) In general, guarantees of non-repetition are also upheld by the targeted shifting of law and policy to eliminate and prevent violations, and habilitation/rehabilitation along with cessation of violations and restitution are upheld by support to leave institutions and resettle in communities. Note that habilitation/rehabilitation as a form of reparation should not equate to psychosocial rehabilitation in the mental health field; it is rather the services or supports needed to repair the harms done by institutionalization itself; see DI Guidelines para 37 and note 239 and its accompanying text). |
7 | DI Guidelines, para 115. |
8 | In the process leading to the development of the Guidelines, I called for a ‘reparations approach to deinstitutionalization’ and encouraged other survivors to do the same in their submissions—https://www.madinamerica.com/2021/02/crpd-reparations-approach/, accessed on 20 February 2024. Several did, as reflected in the outcome documents of regional consultations in the EU and other Western European countries and states; Eastern Europe and Central Asia; the Caribbean and North America; and Central and South America. Available online: https://www.ohchr.org/en/treaty-bodies/crpd/regional-consultations-and-guidelines-deinstitutionalisation-article-19, accessed on 20 February 2024. See also the COSP15 Side Event on Remedy and Reparation for Institutionalization, organized by the Center for the Human Rights of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry, in cooperation with Transforming Communities for Inclusion and Validity Foundation (28 June 2002). Available online: https://youtu.be/UOSp7I9z0Nk?si=R11EyGnf2kt9GLBE, accessed on 20 February 2024. |
9 | DI Guidelines, para 93. |
10 | Id, para 94. On the limitations of such training, see the discussion below on Section 7. |
11 | Id, para 95 (d). |
12 | Id, paras 86 and 94, respectively. |
13 | Id, paras 13, 31, 57, 58, and 105. |
14 | Id, paras 3, 20 (‘those affected by institutionalization’), 34, 35, 53, 67, 68, 70, 73, 94, 95(d), 100, 109, 119, 121, 122, 123, 130, 132, 134, 135, 137, 140, 142, and 143. Of these, paras 95(d), 119, 121, 122, 123, 132, 134, and 135 relate to remedy and reparations. Paras 70, 73, 94, and 100 relate to the role of survivors in peer support, support networks, and community inclusion. The remainder relate to consultation and participation in various aspects of policymaking linked to deinstitutionalization including survivors’ participation in the development of the Guidelines. |
15 | Article 4.3 reads as follows:
Even before the CRPD, Rule 17 of the Standard Rules on the Equalization of Opportunities for Persons with Disabilities (A/RES/48/96) called for organizations of persons with disabilities to have ‘considerable influence’ within a national coordinating committee, envisioned as a public–private collaboration ‘to serve as a national focal point on disability matters’. |
16 | See https://www.ohchr.org/en/calls-for-input/2022/call-submissions-draft-guidelines-deinstitutionalization-including-emergencies, accessed on 20 February 2024. |
17 | Paragraphs 3, 34, 67, 68, 109, 125, 130, 140, 142, and 143 refer to both individuals and organizations; paragraphs 65, 70, 131, and 137 refer only to organizations; paragraphs 20, 41, 100, and 122 refer to ‘persons with disabilities’ and/or ‘survivors’, without specifying individuals or organizations; paragraph 35 refers to providing support and accessible information to facilitate the participation of persons living in institutions, survivors, and those most at risk of institutionalization—suggesting outreach at the individual level. |
18 | The elimination of psychiatric incarceration and forced interventions is a bedrock premise of these Guidelines as it was of the Guidelines on Article 14. See paragraphs 6, 10, 13, 15, 17, 20, 28, 32, 55, 57, 58, 61, 62, 64, 90, 93, 98 (see note 186 and accompanying text), 103, 108, 115, 120, 123, 126, and 143. On rejecting medicalization, see paras 10 (a crisis is not a medical condition requiring treatment), 64 (community-based services that are medicalized should be discontinued), 76 (requiring options for primary support services outside the health system and not requiring mental health diagnosis or treatment), 90 (‘finding of “mental health condition” prohibited as disqualifier), and 143 (‘medical model approach and coercive mental health laws’ are bad practices). On limiting the scope of action of the mental health system in the transformative processes and transformed supports and services envisioned, see paras 20 (‘those involved in managing or perpetuating institutions’ should not lead deinstitutionalization processes), 32 (housing for people leaving institutions cannot be ‘under the control of the mental health system’), 34 (‘service providers … should be prevented from influencing decision-making processes related to institutionalization’), 66 (‘those responsible for human rights violations should not be licensed to provide new services’), 73 (peer support should be ‘independent of institutions and medical professionals’), 98 (‘institutional authorities and personnel should not provide “continuity of care” in the community”’), 117 (‘authorities and experts implicated in institutionalization should not have a role in creating or implementing mechanisms for redress and reparations, but should be invited to accept accountability’), 122 (‘ensure that perpetrators do not hold positions of authority or expert status in [redress and reparations] mechanisms or processes and are not called upon to provide habilitation, rehabilitation or other services’), and 130 (‘exclude staff of institutions from deinstitutionalization monitoring processes’). |
19 | A/72/55, Annex (Adopted by the Committee at its fourteenth session (17 August–4 September 2015) [hereafter Article 14 Guidelines]. |
20 | DI Guidelines, para 2. |
21 | Id, para 3. See https://www.ohchr.org/en/treaty-bodies/crpd/regional-consultations-and-guidelines-deinstitutionalisation-article-19 (accessed on 20 February 2024) for more details of the regional consultations, including downloadable outcome documents that memorialize the concerns and recommendations expressed by participants. |
22 | See Concept Note on Guidelines on Deinstitutionalization. Available online: https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/2021–12/CRPD-Draft_Guidelines-English.docx (accessed on 20 February 2024); see also on transversal inclusion at the stage of development, Informative Note for Stakeholders. Available online: https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/Documents/HRBodies/CRPD/24thSession/Consultation-process-Informative-note-OPDs.docx (accessed on 20 February 2024). |
23 | Survivors of psychiatry adapt the social model of disability so that it is simultaneously a social model of impairment, that is, we contest the notion that psychosocial disability implies an underlying medical condition (see note 239 and also Article 14 Guidelines, para 6). This view is compatible with a human rights and non-discrimination model that goes beyond the social model of disability as it is commonly understood (see Degener 2014). |
24 | DI Guidelines, paras 7 and 6, respectively. Articles mentioned in paragraph 6 are 5, 12, 14, 15, 16, 17, and 25. See also Report of the Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment of punishment, A/HRC/43/49 (14 February 2020) [‘Melzer Report’], paragraph 37:
|
25 | Id, paras 4 and 5. See also paragraph 20, which highlights practices that perpetuate institutionalization that are to be avoided. Though not stated explicitly, those practices emerged in earlier deinstitutionalization initiatives that were non-compliant with the Convention. |
26 | See WHO Mental Health Atlas (2020). Psychiatric institutionalization in all its forms is a global concern, with varying intensity skewing towards high and upper-middle-income countries. Taking the United States as an example, see Wipond (2023). |
27 | Id, para 8. |
28 | Id. |
29 | Id, para 9. |
30 | Id, para 11; see also para 16 (‘All institutions, including those run and controlled by non-State actors, should be included in deinstitutionalization reforms’) and CRPD Article 4.1(e) (‘States Parties undertake … to take all appropriate measures to eliminate discrimination on the basis of disability by any person, organization or private enterprise’). |
31 | On the prevention of bad practices from emerging in service provision, see paras 20, 28, and 143. On the need to combat segregative practices by families, see Summary Notes of the Regional Consultation of Africa, the Regional Consultation of Central and South America, and the Regional Consultation of the Middle East and North Africa. Available online: https://www.ohchr.org/en/treaty-bodies/crpd/regional-consultations-and-guidelines-deinstitutionalisation-article-19 (accessed on 20 February 2024). |
32 | DI Guidelines, para 10. |
33 | |
34 | DI Guidelines, para 12. |
35 | Id, para 13. With respect to immediately revoking detentions under mental health laws, this obligation builds on General Comment No. 5, which included as a dimension of ‘respect’ for the rights under Article 19 ‘the obligation to release all individuals who are being confined against their will in mental health services or other disability-specific forms of deprivation of liberty’. CRPD/C/18/1 (2017), para 48. See also as emphasizing immediacy and rejecting any case-by-case approach to release from disability-based detention, para 57: ‘Releasing persons with disabilities from disability-based detention and preventing new detentions are immediate obligations, and not subject to discretionary judicial or administrative procedures’. |
36 | Id, para 13. |
37 | Basic Principles and Guidelines on Reparations, note 6 above, para 22(a). See also the discussion below on Section 9. |
38 | DI Guidelines, para 14. Compare with General Comment No. 5, CRPD/C/GC/5 (2017), para 16(c). Paragraph 16 of the Guidelines adds the point that ‘the absence, reform, or removal of one or more institutional elements cannot be used to characterize a setting as community-based’. |
39 | ICCPR General Comment No. 35, CCPR/C/GC/35 (2014), para 3; see also paras 5 and 6. |
40 | The Queensland Advocacy for Inclusion has used the defining elements in paragraph 14 to design a ‘deinstitutionalization report card’, a draft of which was presented at the 16th CRPD Conference of States Parties. Available online: https://qai.org.au/deinstitutionalisation-report-card/, accessed on 20 February 2024. This is one approach to identifying institutions, and might be built on to take into account paragraphs 15–17 as well. |
41 | DI Guidelines, para 17. |
42 | Such a reading is confirmed by the intent stated in paragraph 1 that these Guidelines complement both General Comment No. 5 on Article 19 and the Guidelines on liberty and security of persons with disabilities (Article 14). Key provisions in the Guidelines on Article 14 regarding the scope of the absolute prohibition of disability-based detention include paragraphs 6, 10, 13, 20, and 21. See also Wipond (2023) as to the necessity to include a wide variety of sites of detention and placement (e.g., emergency rooms, ‘scatter beds’ in general hospitals, among others) within the concept of institutionalization, with reference to the mental health system in the United States. |
43 | CRPD addresses ‘liberty of movement’ in this sense in Article 18. |
44 | Human Rights Committee, General Comment No. 35, CCPR/C/GC/35 (2014), para 6. For the Human Rights Committee, the deprivation of liberty includes both arrest and detention. CRPD Article 14 refers to ‘deprivation of liberty’ but not ‘detention’; in the Guidelines, the two concepts are indistinguishable (compare paragraphs 6, 15, 17, 18, 57, 58, 108, and 120). |
45 | See, for example, New York State Mental Hygiene Law §§ 9.37 (mandatory duty of police to take persons into custody and involuntarily transport them to a mental health facility on the application of a state mental health official) and 9.41 (discretionary power of police to do the same on their own judgment). |
46 | See also paragraphs 28 and 32 (on segregated services that should be prevented from emerging and the reiteration of the right to housing that is not conditioned on the acceptance of unwanted services, respectively.) |
47 | Melzer Report, A/43/49, para 37; see note 24 for text. |
48 | See also notes 86–89, 116, and their accompanying text. |
49 | DI Guidelines, para 19. |
50 | Id, para 20. See also paragraph 28. |
51 | Id, para 21. |
52 | Id, para 23. |
53 | Id, paras 22 and 25, respectively. |
54 | Id, para 24. |
55 | Id, para 27. |
56 | Id, para 26. |
57 | Id, para 28. |
58 | Id, para 29. |
59 | Id, para 30. See also para 63 (calling on states to ‘identify funding currently going into institutions and reallocate these to services that respond to the expressed requirements of persons with disabilities’). |
60 | Id, para 31. |
61 | Id. See also para 58 (calling for ‘emergency assistance’ to leave places of arbitrary detention) and paras 90, 92, and 105 (calling for a ‘robust social protection package to meet immediate and medium-term needs’ as well as longer-term social protection as needed). |
62 | See discussion above on paragraphs 14 and 15. |
63 | DI Guidelines, para 32. |
64 | Id. |
65 | Id. |
66 | Id. Perpetrators of institutionalization are also to be precluded from providing habilitation and rehabilitation or other services (para 122). |
67 | Id, para 33. |
68 | Id. |
69 | Id, para 34. |
70 | Id. |
71 | Id, para 36. |
72 | See the COSP15 Side Event on Remedy and Reparation for Institutionalization. Available online: https://youtu.be/UOSp7I9z0Nk, accessed on 20 February 2024. Speakers addressed, among other questions, the state’s role and the value of whole-society initiatives. |
73 | DI Guidelines, para 37. |
74 | Id. |
75 | Id. |
76 | See paragraphs 95(a) (‘Persons leaving institutions should be respected as decision makers, with support if required, in respect of all aspects of leaving the institution’) and 55 (‘The exercise of decision-making by persons with disabilities who are currently placed in institutions should be respected within the deinstitutionalization process’). |
77 | DI Guidelines, para 93. |
78 | Id, para 19. |
79 | See Article 12, para 4, and GC1 para 22 (‘Undue influence is characterized as occurring, where the quality of the interaction between the support person and the person being supported includes signs of fear, aggression, threat, deception or manipulation’). |
80 | See notes 149–150 and accompanying text. |
81 | Compare with paragraph 44 describing the diversity of families in a discussion of children with disabilities: ‘A family may include married and unmarried parents, single parents, same-sex parents, adoptive families, kinship care, sibling care, extended family, substitute families or foster care’. |
82 | The few exceptions I have found are paragraph 89 (income support for persons with disabilities and their dependents), paragraph 90 (‘family life’ listed among other areas of mainstream services), paragraph 120 (restitution as including the re-establishment of relationships with children or family or origin). |
83 | E.g., in para 38, involvement in deinstitutionalization is ‘allowed only with … express consent’; ‘state support for family members should be provided only with full respect for the right of persons with disabilities to have choice and control over the kind of support received and the way in which it is used’. |
84 | DI Guidelines, para 39. |
85 | Id, para 41. |
86 | See also notes 51 and 116 and their accompanying text. |
87 | For example, Robert Ho was detained in a mental health facility ‘at the president’s pleasure’ after distributing flyers about the election system in Singapore (‘Robert Ho threatened with IMH detention at President’s pleasure’, https://yoursdp.org/2005/04/08/robert_ho_threatened_with_imh_detention_at_president_s_pleasure/, accessed on 20 February 2024). Boon Suan Ban was similarly detained after being acquitted of defamation charges as being ‘of unsound mind’ in connection with a financial matter involving the Chief Justice (‘1994–2015: A Chronology of Authoritarian Rule in Singapore’, http://singaporerebel.blogspot.com/2011/03/1994-2011-chronology-of-authoritarian.html, accessed on 20 February 2024). ‘Singapore’s most prominent human rights lawyer’ M Ravi has been subjected to repeated actions designed to prevent him from carrying out his work, some of which have been based on his psychosocial disability (‘Singapore’s Bipolar Human Rights Lawyer Faces Disbarment’, August 28, 2015, https://www.asiasentinel.com/p/singapore-bipolar-human-rights-lawyer-ravi-disbarment, accessed on 20 February 2024; Lawyers’ Rights Watch Canada, ‘Singapore: Discontinue disciplinary action against lawyer M. Ravi|Letter’, 11 August 2015, https://www.lrwc.org/singapore-in-the-matter-of-m-ravi-so-madasamy-letter/, accessed on 20 February 2024). |
88 | See note 48 and accompanying text. |
89 | See Kaba and Ritchie (2022). Kaba and Ritchie also address the link between police violence and disability and include involuntary commitment as ‘soft policing’. |
90 | DI Guidelines, para 42. |
91 | Id, paras 43–46. |
92 | Id, para 44. |
93 | Id, para 49. |
94 | ‘The United Nations, for statistical purposes, defines “youth”, as those persons between the ages of 15 and 24 years, without prejudice to other definitions by Member States’. https://www.un.org/esa/socdev/documents/youth/fact-sheets/youth-definition.pdf, accessed on 20 February 2024. Under the Convention on the Rights of the Child, Article 1, ‘a child means every human being below the age of eighteen years unless under the law applicable to the child, majority is attained earlier’. https://www.ohchr.org/en/instruments-mechanisms/instruments/convention-rights-child, accessed on 20 February 2024. |
95 | DI Guidelines, paras 50 and 51, respectively. See also paragraph 45, ‘Support for children with disabilities and families, as early as possible, should be included in mainstream support for all children. Peer support for children and adolescents is essential for full community inclusion’. |
96 | |
97 | Id, para 48. |
98 | See CEDAW, Article 15.2: ‘States Parties shall accord to women, in civil matters, a legal capacity identical to that of men and the same opportunities to exercise that capacity’. The evolving capacities of girls with disabilities are surely to be recognized on an equal basis as those of boys with disabilities. This is different from the parameters of age and maturity, which do imply differentials. |
99 | DI Guidelines, para 48. |
100 | Id, para 52. See also Article 7, Right to Independence and Autonomy of the Inter-American Convention on Protecting the Human Rights of Older Persons (drawing on CRPD text and general comments):
Article 12 of that Convention addresses ‘long-term care services’ and will need to be considered in light of these Guidelines to ensure that services for older persons do not amount to institutionalization and are fully compliant with CRPD in states parties. (See also Article 30, which virtually copies the CRPD on legal capacity, applying the same text to older persons.) |
101 | Report of the Independent Expert on the enjoyment of all human rights by older persons, A/HRC/39/50 (July 10, 2018), para 9; Report of the Special Rapporteur on the rights of persons with disabilities, A/74/186 (July 17, 2019), paras 33–35. |
102 | DI Guidelines, paras 54 and 61 (b) and (c) (legal recognition and enforceability of these rights, and effective remedies against institutionalization and discrimination ‘including the failure to provide reasonable accommodations or support in the community’). |
103 | Id, para 53. See further detail below on Section 9 of the Guidelines dealing extensively with ‘Remedies, reparations and redress’. |
104 | Id, para 60. |
105 | Id, para 55. |
106 | See discussion at notes 182–189 and accompanying text. |
107 | These measures correspond to the cessation of violations, considered to be ‘the first requirement in eliminating the consequences of wrongful conduct’ (International Law Commission, Commentary to the Article 30 of the Articles on State Responsibility for Internationally Wrongful Acts, (2001) II(2) Yearbook of the ILC, para (4)) and ‘an essential element of the right to an effective remedy’ (Human Rights Committee, General Comment No. 31 on the Nature of the General Legal Obligation Imposed on States Parties to the Covenant, UN Doc CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/Add.13 (2004), para 15), both cited in International Commission of Jurists, The Right to a Remedy and Reparation for Gross Human Rights Violations: Practitioners Guide No. 2 (revised edition 2018). Available online: https://www.icj.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Universal-Right-to-a-Remedy-Publications-Reports-Practitioners-Guides-2018-ENG.pdf, accessed on 20 February 2024. Cessation is also said to include the repeal of legislation associated with a violative regime (which is also often addressed as guarantees of non-repetition): ‘All legislative and regulatory acts adopted with a view to its construction and to the establishment of its associated regime, must forthwith be repealed or rendered ineffective’ (Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestine Territory (Advisory Opinion), ICJ Judgment of 4 July 2004, para 151), also cited in the International Commission of Jurists’ Practitioners Guide. |
108 | DI Guidelines, para 55. |
109 | Id, para 57. |
110 | The Working Group on Arbitrary Detention suggested the following actions by a court as a means for individuals ‘detained in a psychiatric hospital or subjected to forced treatment’ to ‘effectively and promptly secure their release’:
See also Tina Minkowitz, Center for the Human Rights of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry, Supporting opinion, amicus curiae, in a trial regarding the involuntary hospitalization of persons with disabilities in psychiatric hospitals in Mexico, Queja 7/2023. Available online: https://www.academia.edu/110901519/CHRUSP_Amicus_Mexico_SJCN, accessed on 20 February 2024. |
111 | Id, para 55. |
112 | Id. Recall that forced treatment violates the right to be free from torture and other ill-treatment (Article 14 Guidelines, para 12; GC1, para 42) and ‘may well amount to torture’ (Melzer Report, A/43/49, para 37; see note 24). |
113 | Hege Orefellen has emphasized this point:
Presentation delivered on June 18, 2021, in Reimagining Crisis Support Book Launch, a side event of the Center for the Human Rights of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry at the Conference of States Parties to the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Available online: https://youtu.be/F53PcGXwmGQ?si=nbpCVV_0d_OJk95R, accessed on 20 February 2024. |
114 | DI Guidelines, para 126. |
115 | Id, para 58. On the provision of emergency assistance to leave, see also paragraphs 31 and 105. |
116 | Id, paras 56 and 58. See also note 48 and accompanying text. |
117 | Id, para 59. |
118 | See Article 14 Guidelines, paras 6 and 7. |
119 | DI Guidelines, para 60. See also note 189 and accompanying text. |
120 | Id, para 62. |
121 | Id, paras 61 and 62. |
122 | Id, para 61. |
123 | Id, para 63. See also paragraph 30 and the discussion above on Section 3 Part E. |
124 | Id. See also the discussion below regarding Section 10 and Section 11 on data collection and the monitoring of deinstitutionalization. Respect for legal capacity and privacy is essential in carrying out all such activities. |
125 | Id, para 64. |
126 | Id, para 66. |
127 | Id, para 66. |
128 | |
129 | DI Guidelines, para 65. |
130 | Id. |
131 | Id, para 67. |
132 | Id. |
133 | Id, para 68. |
134 | Id, paras 23, 24, 60, 71, and 74. |
135 | Id, para 69. |
136 | Id, para 70. |
137 | Id. |
138 | Id, para 73. |
139 | The classic text is Judi Chamberlin, On Our Own: Patient Controlled Alternatives to the Mental Health System (1978). As examples of present-day autonomous peer support practices, see Redesfera Locura Latina, Primer Ciclo de Webinars: Grupos de Apoyo Mutuo (26 July 2019), https://youtu.be/PMYjwIbz__w?si=s-KhHtw-XKO1puO1, accessed on 20 February 2024; Afiya Peer Respite, https://wildfloweralliance.org/afiya/, accessed on 20 February 2024; and Intentional Peer Support, https://www.intentionalpeersupport.org/, accessed on 20 February 2024. |
140 | The Committee’s decision in Bellini v. Italy, CRPD/C/27/D/51/2018, adopted 26 August 2022, took a contrary approach, as had General Comment No. 5 (paragraph 68), treating ‘respite care services’ as a service provided to ‘family caregivers’. Bellini found that Articles 19, 23, and 28, read in conjunction with Article 5, required the provision of ‘individualized support services’, including ‘respite care services’, to the family of a non-disabled complainant who provides support to her daughter and husband, both of whom are persons with disabilities (paragraph 8 (a) (ii). Article 5 prohibits discrimination based on disability, which can encompass discrimination based on association with a person with a disability. The provision of support to family members that they require in order to provide support to persons with disabilities, within the context of family relationships and/or living together as a household, is a complex issue. While it makes sense to ground the decision in Article 5, the question of choice and agency by persons with disabilities with respect to receiving support from family members should have been recognized and addressed in regard to both admissibility and merits, including by inquiring about the provision of support in decision-making and whether recourse was had to the ‘best interpretation of will and preferences’ of the persons concerned (specifying the basis for determining that the criteria were met for doing so), and by including decision-making support in the recommendations of support to be provided to the persons with disabilities and their family member. The concept of ‘respite care’ as a service provided to family members who provide support is especially problematic as it positions the supporter as the primary rights holder with respect to the alternate support being offered to the person with a disability. The need for alternate supporters is addressed in paragraph 74 of these Guidelines as a feature to be built into all support arrangements so that it remains clearly subject to the will and preferences of the person receiving support, as required under paragraph 72 of the Guidelines and under Article 12. See also notes 146–150 and their accompanying text, and see additionally General Comment No. 1, paragraphs 29 (a) (people with high support needs should not be excluded from support in decision-making) and 21 (setting out ‘best interpretation of will and preferences’ standard and criteria for its application). The reference to ‘respite care’ in Article 28 should be interpreted consistently with these Guidelines and with the totality of the Convention as referring to support services offered to the person with a disability when they need a temporary break from their usual environment or routine, which may include their family members or not (as in the concept of crisis respite discussed in the main text). Such a construction would follow the example in paragraph 33 of these Guidelines regarding the interpretation of ‘residential services’ in Article 19 (b). |
141 | DI Guidelines, para 28; see also paragraph 74. |
142 | Id, para 71. |
143 | Id, para 79. This paragraph is placed anomalously in the section on support services. |
144 | Id, para 100. |
145 | Id, para 74. |
146 | See note 140 and accompanying text. |
147 | DI Guidelines, para 74. |
148 | Id, para 72. |
149 | GC1, paras 19 (‘Some persons with disabilities only seek recognition of their right to legal capacity on an equal basis with others … and may not wish to exercise their right to support’) and 29(g) (‘The person must have the right to refuse support and terminate or change the support relationship at any time’). |
150 | Reimagining Crisis Support, pp. 14–27. |
151 | DI Guidelines, para 75. |
152 | See below under Section 7 Part B for a discussion of the obligation to refrain from embedding a medical model of disability, note 205 and accompanying text (referencing some of the harms caused to health), and note 239 (concept of psychosocial disability is defined by the movement, and not linked to ‘psychosocial rehabilitation’). |
153 | DI Guidelines, para 76. |
154 | |
155 | |
156 | DI Guidelines, para 77; see also paragraph 28. |
157 | Id, para 78. |
158 | Id, para 81. |
159 | Id, para 82. |
160 | Id, para 79. |
161 | Id, para 80. |
162 | Id. |
163 | Id. |
164 | Id, paras 83–84. See also para 27, describing key features of personal assistance as ‘individualized, based on individual needs, and controlled by the user’, and stating that people leaving institutions should be able to connect with personal assistance schemes before leaving institutions so as to access them immediately in the community. |
165 | Concluding Observations on Austria (2013), CRPD/C/AUT/CO/1, paras 38–39. |
166 | DI Guidelines, para 85. |
167 | Id, para 86. |
168 | Id, para 87. |
169 | Id, para 89. |
170 | Id, para 88. |
171 | Addressed with some variations in paras 31, 58, and 105. |
172 | DI Guidelines, para 89. |
173 | Id, para 92. |
174 | Id, para 90 (‘areas such as, personal mobility, accessibility, communication, health-care, family life, an adequate standard of living, inclusive education, participation in political and public life, housing, social protection, and participation in cultural and community life, leisure, recreation and sport’) and para 92, respectively. |
175 | Id, para 90. |
176 | Id, para 92. |
177 | Id, paras 93–98 inclusive. See also para 37 (‘Assessment of capacities for independent living based on impairment are discriminatory and should shift to assessments of individualized requirements and barriers for independent living in the community’). |
178 | Id, paras 94 and 95(a); see also para 55 (respect for decision-making and support to exercise legal capacity within the deinstitutionalization process) and para 63 (mapping of individuals’ important relationships to facilitate planning for their support is subject to their will and preferences). See notes 73–80 and accompanying text for a discussion of decision-making in relation to leaving institutions. |
179 | Id, paras 93 and 58, respectively. |
180 | Id. |
181 | Id, para 95(d). |
182 | See notes 14–17 and accompanying text. |
183 | DI Guidelines, para 94. |
184 | Id, para 94. |
185 | Id, para 98. See also note 106 and accompanying text. |
186 | Id, para 98. |
187 | Id, paras 20, 122, and 130, respectively. See additional references in note 18 above. |
188 | Linda Radzik, Making Amends: Atonement in Morality, Law, and Politics (2009), pp. 99–100. |
189 | Mapping exercises, addressed in paras 60–66 (see discussion under Section 5, Part B), should look into these capabilities as an early-stage priority to begin the needed support work as soon as possible, pursuant to the immediate obligation to cease violations. On support practices by survivors and people with psychosocial disabilities, see notes 136–139 and accompanying text and note 154 and accompanying text. |
190 | DI Guidelines, para 95 (b) and (e), respectively. |
191 | Such an approach is contemplated in paragraph 37 of the Guidelines: States parties should be held accountable for limiting the personal development of institutionalized people and should not create new barriers to leaving institutions by attributing “vulnerability” or “weakness” to persons with disabilities. Deinstitutionalization processes should be aimed at restoring the dignity and recognizing the diversity of persons with disabilities. Assessment of capacities for independent living based on impairment are discriminatory and should shift to assessments of individualized requirements and barriers for independent living in the community. |
192 | DI Guidelines, para 95 (a) and (c), respectively. |
193 | See para 41 as well, on taking account of intersectionality, i.e., the diversity of identities and experiences and structural oppression beyond disability alone:
|
194 | DI Guidelines, para 95 (f). |
195 | Id, paras 27 (personal assistance) 55 (support in exercising legal capacity); and paras 31, 58 and 105 (provision of assistance upon leaving institutions). |
196 | Id, para 96. |
197 | Id, para 97. |
198 | Id, paras 96, 128, and 135, respectively; see also para 134 (states cannot restrict or deny a person’s own access to their own records). A policy should be established on handing over and/or expunging all mental health-related records at the person’s request, even if they do not pertain to institutionalization, as they are used in a similarly discriminatory fashion as records of institutionalization. This approach would complement the strengthened requirement for consent to mental health services in paragraph 55 and is consistent with the de-medicalization of psychosocial disability. |
199 | Id, para 99. |
200 | Id, para 100. |
201 | As an example of community-level awareness-raising regarding a traumatizing experience, consider Paula Caplan’s project ‘Listen to a Veteran’, https://www.madinamerica.com/2020/03/paula-caplan-listen-veteran/, accessed on 20 February 2024. |
202 | DI Guidelines, para 101. |
203 | Id, para 102. |
204 | Id, para 103. |
205 | See Joint Submission to Human Rights Committee for its review of the United States in October 2013 on nonconsensual psychiatric medication. Available online: http://www.crpdcourse.org/course-content/segment-2-torture/chruspusiccprshadowreportfinal/, accessed on 20 February 2024; Breggin (1983, 2007); Andre (2009). |
206 | DI Guidelines, para 104. |
207 | Id, para 97. |
208 | CHRUSP submission to CRPD for General Comment No. 8 on Article 27. Available online: https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/2021-12/CHRUSP.docx, accessed on 20 February 2024. |
209 | DI Guidelines, para 105. |
210 | Examples given are ‘child support, unemployment benefits, rental subsidies, food stamps, pensions, public health schemes, subsidized public transport and tax credits’. |
211 | DI Guidelines, para 106. |
212 | Id, para 107. Such plans are to be ‘informed by persons with disabilities and their representative organizations, particularly those of survivors of institutionalization’, para 109. |
213 | Id, para 112. |
214 | Id, para 110. |
215 | Id, para 108. |
216 | Id, para 113. |
217 | Id, para 109. |
218 | Id, para 108. |
219 | Id. See also notes 27–29 and accompanying text. |
220 | Id, para 111. Detailed as ‘health services, sexual and reproductive health services, habilitation, rehabilitation, assistive devices, personal assistance, housing, employment and community-based services’. |
221 | Id, para 112. |
222 | Id. |
223 | See Reports by the Special Rapporteur on the rights of persons with disabilities, Gerard Quinn, A/76/146 (19 July 2021, ‘protection of the rights of persons with disabilities in the context of armed conflict’); A/77/203 (20 July 2022, ‘the protection of the rights of persons with disabilities in the context of military operations’); and A/78/124 (13 July 2023, ‘highlight[ing] the moral agency of persons with disabilities in rebuilding broken societies in the post-conflict context’). Institutionalization is highlighted throughout these reports as a ‘persistent and systemic violation’ faced by persons with disabilities (A/77/203, para 19; see also A/76/146, para 51; A/77/203, para 16; and A/78/124, paras 22 and 26). |
224 | Id, paras 115 and 116, respectively. On the nature of the ‘multiple’ violation, see paragraph 6 enumerating articles of the Convention in addition to Article 19 that are violated by institutionalization. (This should not be viewed as exhaustive, for instance, the right to home and family (Article 23), the right to privacy (Article 22), and the right to an adequate standard of living (Article 28) are violated as well). |
225 | |
226 | Basic Principles and Guidelines on Reparation, paras 1 and 3. |
227 | Article 14 Guidelines, para 24; see also International Principles and Guidelines on Access to Justice, Guidelines 8.1 and 8.2(m). On arbitrary detention, including in the disability context, see United Nations Basic Principles and Guidelines on Remedies and Procedures on the Right of Anyone Deprived of Their Liberty to Bring Proceedings Before a Court (A/HRC/30/37 (2015), paras 3, 25, 87–92, and 107(f); paras 107(d) and (e) indicate the potential form of a judicial remedy that would implement the cessation of violations towards a particular individual and at the systemic level). These documents, along with the Convention itself and the Basic Principles and Guidelines on Remedy and Reparation, are mentioned in paragraph 116 of the DI Guidelines as references for states’ international obligations to redress institutionalization. On torture and other ill-treatment, see Committee against Torture, General Comment No. 3, CAT/C/GC/3 (2012). On discrimination, see Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women, General Recommendation No. 28 on the core obligations of States parties under Article 2 of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, CEDAW/C/GC/28 (2010), para 32. |
228 | DI Guidelines, para 115. |
229 | See Guidelines on Article 14, para 19: ‘Review of detentions must have the purpose of challenging arbitrary detentions and obtaining the immediate release of persons found to have been arbitrarily detrained; under no circumstances should it allow for the extension of arbitrary detention’. |
230 | Basic Principles and Guidelines on Reparation, para 18, listing the forms, and paras 19–23, elaborating their content. See also note 107 and the ICJ Practitioners Guide cited in that note, and see the sources in note 227 which apply the forms of reparation to psychiatric institutionalization. |
231 | DI Guidelines, para 117. |
232 | Id, para 121. |
233 | Id, para 119. |
234 | Id, para 117. |
235 | DI Guidelines, para 118. |
236 | Id, para 119. |
237 | Id, para 120. |
238 | Id. |
239 | The identity of ‘psychosocial disability’ is not affiliated with psychosocial rehabilitation, see World Network of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry, Psychosocial Disability. On file with author. See also the definition of psychosocial disability cited in the Center for the Human Rights of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry and Campaign to Support CRPD Absolute Prohibition of Commitment and Forced Treatment, Response to draft General Comment 7 on Article 4.3, paragraph 14(a) and (d) and transversal. Available online: https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/Documents/HRBodies/CRPD/DraftGC7/CHRUSPAbProsubmission_1.docx, accessed on 20 February 2024. The practice known as ‘psychosocial rehabilitation’ perpetuates a medical model of disability, see Barbato (2004). ‘In the WHO/WAPR consensus statement jointly endorsed in 1996, psychosocial rehabilitation is defined as a process that facilitates the opportunity for individuals impaired, disabled or handicapped by a mental disorder to reach their optimal level of functioning in the community. It implies both improving individuals’ competencies and introducing environmental changes in order to improve their quality of life’. |
240 | See above notes 107–109 and accompanying text, as well as notes 60–61 and accompanying text (economic assistance as facultative to the restoration of liberty). As cessation of violations is preliminary to other measures, it is a stronger basis for victimized persons to assert their demand for immediate release. |
241 | DI Guidelines, para 120. |
242 | Id, para 122. |
243 | Id, paras 117 and 122. |
244 | Id. |
245 | Id, para 123. |
246 | The political dimension goes beyond the requirements of law. It should not be misused as a workaround by states or perpetrators to avoid legal responsibility but is complementary. The political (and moral) dimension can be pursued by both official state bodies and civil society, including on the very granular level of interpersonal relationships, families and communities affected by institutionalization. Paragraph 121 of the Guidelines alludes to the granular level of repair needed when it calls for truth commissions to include in their scope of investigation the social harms inherent in institutionalization, as do paragraph 94 in signaling that families need to be prepared to address the harms of institutionalization caused to their relative, and paragraph 36 in calling for deinstitutionalization planning processes to incorporate public awareness-raising of the harms of institutionalization and the need for change. Thanks to Hege Orefellen and Ann Campbell for their comments that contributed to these points. |
247 | On the last point, see DI Guidelines, para 122 (respect for will and preferences of victims) and Basic Principles and Guidelines on Reparation, para 10:
See also the discussions on Disaggregated data (Section 10) and Monitoring deinstitutionalization processes (Section 11) below. |
248 | Responsiveness to survivors’ needs as an adaptation of process was demonstrated, for example, as the ‘indigenization’ of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission on the removal of Native children from their homes by social workers. The film Dawnland depicts the work of this Commission as it ‘grapples with difficult truths, redefines reconciliation, and chart a new course for state and tribal relations’, see https://upstanderproject.org/films/dawnland, accessed on 20 February 2024. |
249 | An initiative in the state of Victoria, Australia, has recently issued a report, led by people with lived experience of the mental health system, see https://www.livedexperiencejustice.au (accessed on 20 February 2024), recommending a restorative justice process and apologies for ‘harms caused by [Victoria’s] publicly funded mental health system’. The inquiry and its recommendations are flawed by taking place under the Minister of Mental Health and declining to recommend the cessation of violations and guarantees of non-repetition. The restorative process envisioned would aim to ‘improve relations between those who use and administer the system, motivate cultural change in services, and reduce the prevalence of [not end] human rights violations’ (p. 55)—in other words, it is designed to adapt itself to the mental health system and provide a rationale for a recently redesigned mental health policy, rather than providing survivors with a platform to hold that system accountable for full CRPD compliance, including to record the violations and their needs entirely outside the perpetrator’s worldview and constraints. An additional flaw is the inclusion of family members (‘carers’) alongside survivors as impacted persons. While some family members of persons who have been institutionalized have experienced their own pain and suffering by being separated from their loved one and witnessing that person’s pain and suffering, many have been complicit in institutionalization (see the discussion in Section 4 and note 31 and its accompanying text; see also note 140). Survivors may hope that any report or follow-up that may take place will open the door to processes that will in turn lead to ending the violations. Perhaps even, similarly to the resolution depicted in Dawnland (see note 248), survivors can assert their primacy and transform the nature of the process. |
250 | CEDAW/C/85/D/155/2020, para 9.3 (as quoted) and para 8.5 (rejecting the contention of ratione temporis as ground for precluding admissibility). |
251 | CEDAW/C/JPN/CO/7-8 (2016), para 29. In full:
|
252 | DI Guidelines, para 124. |
253 | Id, para 126. |
254 | Id. |
255 | See also CRPD Article 31, paras 1 (chapeau) and 2. |
256 | DI Guidelines, para 128. |
257 | Id, para 135. See note 198 and accompanying text. |
258 | CRPD/C/GC/7 (2018), para 91. |
259 | DI Guidelines, para 124. |
260 | https://www.washingtongroup-disability.com/question-sets/wg-short-set-on-functioning-wg-ss/, accessed on 20 February 2024. |
261 | International Classification on Functioning, Disability and Health: Short Version (World Health Organization 2001), p. 16. |
262 | DI Guidelines, para 125. |
263 | Id, para 65. |
264 | Id, para 127. |
265 | Id, para 129. |
266 | Id, para 129. |
267 | Id, para 137. The closure of institutions cannot be an endpoint for the monitoring of deinstitutionalization processes relating to matters such as ensuring the accessibility of mainstream services and communities to people leaving institutions, prevention of the emergence of new segregated services, and compliance with the economic and social assistance measures needed for resettlement, among other measures called for in these Guidelines that relate specifically to deinstitutionalization and may not otherwise be prioritized within monitoring mechanisms or civil society and DPO initiatives. |
268 | Id, paras 15 and 126. |
269 | Id, paras 130 and 131. |
270 | The SPT’s approach regarding the rights of persons institutionalized and treated medically without informed consent, CAT/OP/27/2 (2016). |
271 | DI Guidelines, paras 13 and 55. The SPT and other treaty bodies that maintain medical-coercive standards conflicting with the CRPD should reconsider so that they can play a constructive role in deinstitutionalization and other redress for violations of the human rights of persons with disabilities. Thanks to Ann Campbell for suggesting this point. |
272 | Id, paras 130 and 137. Paragraph 130 specifically mentions national preventive mechanisms and national human rights institutions as needing to exclude institutional staff. This is welcome but insufficient to ensure their compliance with CRPD so as to be useful and not counterproductive to deinstitutionalization. |
273 | Id, para 131. |
274 | Id, para 57. |
275 | Id, para 132. |
276 | Paragraph 128 of the Guidelines links the amendment of data protection laws to the improvement of human rights monitoring and advocacy as well as to privacy rights. Data protection and privacy are equally relevant to individuals’ rights vis-à-vis independent monitoring mechanisms and civil society or DPO initiatives. If safeguards in that regard are inadequate, they should be improved with the leadership of DPOs. See also paragraphs 55, 63, 94, and 95(a) on respect for legal capacity and decision-making in the deinstitutionalization process. |
277 | DI Guidelines, para 135; see note 198 and accompanying text. |
278 | See Basic Principles and Guidelines on Reparations, para 10 (on treatment of victims). |
279 | DI Guidelines, paras 138 and 141. |
280 | Id, paras 138 and 139. |
281 | Id, para 141. |
282 | Id, para 140. |
283 | Id, para 143. |
284 | Id. |
285 | See discussion of paragraph 17 in Section 3 Part A. Even a brief period of detention in a psychiatric setting, especially if it is the latest in a series of such detentions, can result in loss of housing, work, and supportive relationships with family or others in the community. Such deprivations might also happen in a person’s life preceding the detention, and psychiatry is the last blow. Not everyone will need the same assistance to resettle, but it should be made readily available so that economic needs do not pose an obstacle to leaving. |
286 | TCI Positionality on Community Inclusion (2022) presents a similar view in this discussion of ‘Care’:
I would add that providing individualized support entails respecting the separate agency of the person receiving support, whether it is provided by service providers or by friends, neighbors, or family members (see note 140). |
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Minkowitz, T. Deinstitutionalization as Reparative Justice: A Commentary on the Guidelines on Deinstitutionalization, including in Emergencies. Laws 2024, 13, 14. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13020014
Minkowitz T. Deinstitutionalization as Reparative Justice: A Commentary on the Guidelines on Deinstitutionalization, including in Emergencies. Laws. 2024; 13(2):14. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13020014
Chicago/Turabian StyleMinkowitz, Tina. 2024. "Deinstitutionalization as Reparative Justice: A Commentary on the Guidelines on Deinstitutionalization, including in Emergencies" Laws 13, no. 2: 14. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13020014
APA StyleMinkowitz, T. (2024). Deinstitutionalization as Reparative Justice: A Commentary on the Guidelines on Deinstitutionalization, including in Emergencies. Laws, 13(2), 14. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13020014