Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 April 2021
Is it possible to have an effective legal safeguard within an inherently therapeutic context? This is the issue underlying a significant contrast in the way that similar provisions of the Mental Health Act 1983 (England and Wales) have been interpreted and applied in two different settings: in the purely legal setting of the High Court and by a judicial body in a hospital setting, namely, the Mental Health Review Tribunal.
Before dealing explicitly with the legal framework adopted by the 1983 act, I will briefly set out the kinds of strategies the law can employ to regulate behavior. One technique used in some areas of the law is to draw up an exhaustive list of rules and principles in an attempt to determine the outcome of cases. In this respect the law is concerned to achieve substantive justice; little discretion is vested in decision- makers. Alternatively, the law may confer complete discretion on decision-makers, and insist merely that the rules of natural justice be complied with in the process of making decisions.