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Dying to be responsible: adolescence, autonomy and responsibility
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
Abstract
The United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Administration of Juvenile Justice state that there should be ‘a close relationship between the notion of responsibility for delinquent or criminal behaviour and other social rights and responsibilities’. If healthcare autonomy, or the ‘right to be responsible for making decisions about our own medical welfare’, is accepted as one of these social rights then, in England, the age gap between criminal responsibility and healthcare right is considerable. It has been suggested that this age difference might be explained in terms of the attribution of responsibility; in essence that there is a difference in the timing and nature of the responsibility being ascribed. The aim of this paper is to examine the concept of responsibility, particularly as it relates to adolescent decisions concerning death; the refusal of life-saving treatment, on the one hand, and the commission of homicidal acts, on the other. It would appear that there is considerable overlap in the types of responsibility alluded to in both situations, most particularly in the notions of capacity responsibility and prospective responsibility. If this is so, then having a wide gap between the two ages of responsibility would seem to lack a secure jurisprudential basis.
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References
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6 Nolan LJ has argued that the courts would not countenance the refusal of lifesaving treatment by an adolescent. See Re W (A Minor) (Medical Treatment)[1992] 4 All ER 627 at 647 (Re W). It is clear from of Johnson J in Re P that the judgement in Re W defines the law on this subject: Re P (Medical Treatment: Best Interests)[2004] 2 FLR 1117 (Re P). However, the Mental Capacity Act 2005 indicates that there should be a presumption that all adults (aged 16 or over) have full legal capacity to make decisions for themselves. How the courts might interpret this in future cases that concern adolescent refusal of treatment is uncertain.
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