Freedom of Opinion and Expression: From the Perspective of Psychosocial Disability and Madness
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Symbolic Violence
3. On Terminology
pride in our history of surviving discrimination and abuse inside and outside the psychiatric system, in advocating for our rights and in our personal and collective accomplishments—that psychiatric survivors are much more than a diagnostic label.
4. The International Human Rights to Freedom of Opinion and Expression
Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.
freedom to seek, receive and impart information and ideas of all kinds, regardless of frontiers, either orally, in writing or in print, in the form of art, or through any other media of [a person’s] choice.10
- (a)
- Providing information intended for the general public to persons with disabilities in accessible formats and technologies appropriate to different kinds of disabilities in a timely manner and without additional cost;
- (b)
- Accepting and facilitating the use of sign languages, Braille, augmentative and alternative communication, and all other accessible means, modes and formats of communication of their choice by persons with disabilities in official interactions;
- (c)
- Urging private entities that provide services to the general public, including through the Internet, to provide information and services in accessible and usable formats for persons with disabilities;
- (d)
- Encouraging the mass media, including providers of information through the Internet, to make their services accessible to persons with disabilities;
- (e)
- Recognizing and promoting the use of sign languages.
- (a)
- For respect of the rights or reputations of others;
- (b)
- For the protection of national security or of public order (ordre public), or of public health or morals.
5. Unravelling the Symbolic Violence of Psychiatry and the Mental Health Paradigm
Our personhood and sense of self continued to atrophy as we were coached by professionals to learn to say, “I am a schizophrenic”; “I am a bi-polar”; “I am a multiple”. And each time we repeated this dehumanizing litany our sense of being a person was diminished as “the disease” loomed as an all powerful “It”, a wholly Other entity, an “in-itself” that we were taught we were powerless over.
Under the watchful gaze of a physician, I was taught to read experiences, red cheeks, heavy hearts, and knots, as symptoms of mental illness and as tests of my character. I was constantly quizzed about how well I knew the experiences I had were actually true experiences. I couldn’t be sure what I felt, liked, or wanted anymore. I did, however, become ever more familiar with what doctors felt, liked, and wanted, and that those would be the right things to feel, like, and want.
engage and transform oppressive languages, practices, ideals, laws and systems, along with their human practitioners, in the realms of mental ‘health’ and the psy sciences, as in the wider culture.
To the contrary, it is to acknowledge and validate these experiences as being authentically human, while at the same time rejecting clinical labels that pathologize and degrade; challenging the reductionist assumptions and effects of the medical model; locating psychiatry and its human subjects within wider historical, institutional and cultural contexts; and advancing the position that mental health research, writing, and advocacy are primarily about opposing oppression and promoting human justice.
6. Civil Mental Health Laws, the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and (In)Capacity
The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and Involuntary Mental Health Interventions
7. Juridical Denial of Freedom of Opinion and Expression: Interlocking Material and Symbolic Violence
7.1. The Suppressive Effects of Mental Health Law’s (Threat of) Material Violence
What you describe as chemical incarceration, for me, meant being restrained in what felt like someone else’s body. Pharmaceutical reason confined me within a glass bubble that separated me from my body and my body from the world. Voices were muffled, and responses were delayed and over determined. Within a biomedicalized world of one, I was encouraged to imagine the medication as a guide that would lead me to adjust to the timelines of respectable ‘reality’.
I can choose to accept a diagnosis of psychosis and find it useful. However, the fact remains that not doing so may well mean that I cannot access services, that I am deemed to lack insight and thus subjected to more oppressive forms of ‘treatment’.
7.2. Medico-Legal Incapacitation of the Expressions, Opinions and Epistemologies of Users and Survivors
8. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, opened for signature 30 March 2007, 2515 UNTS 3 (entered into force 3 May 2008) (CRPD). |
2 | ‘Ontological violence’ or nullification occurs when a dominant ideology delivers an interpretation that ‘determines the very being and social existence of the interpreted subjects’ (Žižek 2008, p. 62). |
3 | Although similar issues are raised by forensic mental health and disability laws, my focus here is on civil mental health laws. The term ‘mental health laws’ is used throughout this article when referring to civil mental health laws, which are termed ‘civil commitment laws’ in some countries. |
4 | On the hegemonic nature of psychiatric discourse see Burstow (2013, pp. 80–81). |
5 | For the list of non-governmental organisations representing disabled people that participated in the CRPD negotiations, see United Nations Enable (2007). |
6 | The role of the concept of ‘impairment’ within the social model of disability has been subject to criticism by disability theorists (for example Hughes and Paterson 1997) and doubt has been cast on the applicability of this concept to psychosocial disability (Penson 2015). |
7 | |
8 | Universal Declaration of Human Rights, GA Res 217A, UN Doc A/810 91 (10 December 1948). |
9 | International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, opened for signature 19 December 1966, 999 UNTS 172 (entered into force 23 March 1976) (ICCPR). |
10 | ICCPR, Art 19(2). |
11 | CRPD, Art 12(2). |
12 | CRPD, Art 12(3). |
13 | |
14 | The term ‘psychiatrisation’, which refers to processes that construct and produce people as ‘mentally ill’, subverts understandings of madness and mental distress as individualised pathologies (LeFrançois and Coppock 2014, p. 165). |
15 | |
16 | The scope of this article precludes a fuller account of the relationship between freedom of opinion and expression and global mental health promotion and Western medical imperialism (see (Davar 2015; Jayawickrama and Rose 2017; Bayetti and Jain 2017; Mills 2014), for exploration of relevant intersections). |
17 | See ICCPR, Preamble: ‘Recognizing that these rights derive from the inherent dignity of the human person’. |
18 | I adopt this term to refer to the various orders that authorise involuntary mental health interventions pursuant to civil mental health or commitment laws throughout this article. |
19 | Mental Health Act 2014 (Vic), s. 5; Mental Health Act 2007 (NSW), ss. 12–15 (detention) and 53–54 (community treatment order); Mental Health Act 2015 (ACT), ss. 58 (psychiatric treatment order) and 66 (community care order); Mental Health and Related Services Act (NT), ss. 14–15A (involuntary admission) and 16 (involuntary treatment in the community); Mental Health Act 2016 (Qld), s. 12; Mental Health Act 2009 (SA), ss. 10, 16 (community treatment orders), 21, 25, 29 (inpatient treatment orders); Mental Health Act 2013 (Tas), ss. 39 and 40; Mental Health Act 2014 (WA), s. 25. |
20 | Some Australian mental health statutes broaden the scope of involuntary intervention beyond people considered to have a ‘mental illness’ to cover other people with disability, such as people who are considered to be ‘mentally disordered’ or to have a ‘mentally disturbance’ or ‘cognitive impairment’ in certain circumstances: see, for example, Mental Health and Related Services Act (NT), ss. 15–15A; Mental Health Act 2007 (NSW), s. 15. |
21 | This principle does not form part of the statutory criteria that must be satisfied in order for an involuntary order to be made by the MHT in Tasmania, although it should be factored into decision making under the Mental Health Act 2013 (Tas) by virtue of ss. 12(d) and 62(a). |
22 | The terminology and formulations used for this criterion vary: see Mental Health Act 2016 (Qld), ss. 12(1)(b), 14; Mental Health Act 2009 (SA), ss. 5A, 10(1)(c), 16(1)(c), 21(ba), 25(ba), 29(ba); Mental Health Act 2013 (Tas), ss. 7, 40(e); Mental Health Act 2014 (WA), ss. 18, 25(1)(c). |
23 | See Mental Health Act 2014 (Vic), ss. 68–76; Mental Health Act 2007 (NSW), ss. 68(h1); Mental Health Act 2015 (ACT), ss. 78, 56. In the Northern Territory and the Australian Capital Territory one of the prerequisites is that the person lacks decision-making ability, or has refused, treatment; in the Northern Territory the standard lifts to unreasonable refusal: Mental Health and Related Services Act (NT), s. 14(b)(iii); Mental Health Act 2015 (ACT), ss. 58(2)(b), 66(2)(b). |
24 | The term mental health tribunal (MHT) will be used to refer to the MHT or equivalent body in each jurisdiction. |
25 | Mental Health Act 2007 (NSW), s. 53(3), (5). |
26 | For example, Australia, Ratification (with Declarations), registered with the Secretariat of the United Nations 17 July 2008, 2527 UNTS 289 (date of effect 16 August 2008). |
27 | Mental Health Act 2016 (Qld), ss. 12(1)(b), 14; Mental Health Act 2009 (SA), ss. 5A, 10(1)(c), 16(1)(c), 21(ba), 25(ba), 29(ba); Mental Health Act 2013 (Tas), ss. 7, 40(e); Mental Health Act 2014 (WA), ss. 18, 25(1)(c). |
28 | Mental Health Act 2016 (Qld), s. 14(1)(a)(i). |
29 | In the Northern Territory and Tasmania, the MHT is responsible for pre-approving treatment to be provided to a person subject to involuntary treatment, although clinicians can administer treatment outside this authority in specified circumstances: Mental Health and Related Services Act (NT), s. 55; Mental Health Act 2013 (Tas), s. 41(2)(c). |
30 | Mental Health Act 2014 (Vic), s. 96 (electroshock), s. 102 (neurosurgery); Mental Health Act 2007 (NSW), s. 96 (electroshock); Mental Health Act 2015 (ACT), s. 157 (electroshock); Mental Health Act 2016 (Qld), s. 236 (electroshock), s. 239 (non-ablative neurosurgery); Mental Health Act 2009 (SA), s. 42 (electroshock), s. 43; Mental Health Act (WA), Pt 21, Div 6 (ECT), Pt 21, Div 7 (neurosurgery). |
31 | For example, Mental Health Act 2014 (Vic), s. 70. |
32 | See ICCPR, Art 19(2) (enshrining the right to freedom of expression). |
33 | |
34 | See Bourdieu regarding the situations in which people are denied the ability to imprint meaning upon the structure of social space through the operation of symbolic violence (Bourdieu 1990, pp. 134–35). |
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Beaupert, F. Freedom of Opinion and Expression: From the Perspective of Psychosocial Disability and Madness. Laws 2018, 7, 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws7010003
Beaupert F. Freedom of Opinion and Expression: From the Perspective of Psychosocial Disability and Madness. Laws. 2018; 7(1):3. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws7010003
Chicago/Turabian StyleBeaupert, Fleur. 2018. "Freedom of Opinion and Expression: From the Perspective of Psychosocial Disability and Madness" Laws 7, no. 1: 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws7010003
APA StyleBeaupert, F. (2018). Freedom of Opinion and Expression: From the Perspective of Psychosocial Disability and Madness. Laws, 7(1), 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws7010003