Sessions Information

  • January 5, 2018
    1:30 pm - 3:15 pm
    Session Type: Section Programs
    Session Capacity: N/A
    Location: N/A
    Room: Pacific Ballroom Salon 23
    Floor: North Tower/Ground Level

    Legal competency, the law’s recognition of an individual’s personhood and agency, represents a conceptual cornerstone for law and mental disability scholars. The success of the disability rights movements in fostering greater public support for economic and social rights for people with mental disabilities has generated, at least rhetorically, broader support for the law’s recognition of the decisional capacity of people with mental disabilities in these areas. The scope of scholarly inquiry has expanded in recent years from curbing state encroachment in private decision-making to crafting positive theories of rights for people with mental disabilities in sexuality, reproduction, marriage, and parenting. This panel seeks to bring together legal scholars across several fields to explore emerging theory and doctrine in family law for people with mental disabilities. With its emphasis on intersectionality and cross-pollination, panelists will discuss such issues as assisted reproductive technology, parental termination, and sexual access. An explicit goal of this panel is to develop a research agenda for this emerging interdisciplinary area of legal scholarship.

    Papers from this program will be published in Family Court Review.

    Business meeting at program conclusion.


Session Speakers
Chicago-Kent College of Law, Illinois Institute of Technology
Speaker from a Call for Papers

Brooklyn Law School
Speaker from a Call for Papers

University of Utah, S. J. Quinney College of Law
Speaker

University of California, Davis, School of Law
Moderator

Rutgers Law School
Speaker

Session Fees
  • [5400] Law and Mental Disability, Co-Sponsored by Disability Law, Family and Juvenile Law, and Law, Medicine, and Health Care- - Legal Capacity at the Crossroads: Mental Disability and Family Law: $0.00