Outpatient civil commitment: a dangerous charade or a component of a comprehensive institution of civil commitment? |
| |
Authors: | Robert F Schopp |
| |
Affiliation: | University of Nebraska College of Law, P.O. Box 830902, Lincoln, NE 68583-0902, USA. rschoppl@unl.edu |
| |
Abstract: | ![]() This article examines three criticisms frequently directed toward preventive commitment as one form of outpatient commitment. These criticisms contend that preventive commitment (a) abandons the dangerousness criteria for civil commitmnet, (b) promotes unwarranted inpatient commitment of those who do not meet civil commitment criteria, and (c) undermines important individual liberties by diluting the right to refuse treatment. Understanding and evaluating these criticisms requires analysis of the intersection among empirical, conceptual, and justificatory claims. According to the analysis presented here, advocates of preventive commitment can defend a legitimate role for preventive commitment. This analysis applies to preventive commitment as a dispositional alternative within a comprehensive institution of civil commitment involving distinct parens patriae and police power components. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|