Mental health and human rights in forensic psychiatry in the European Union

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Barrios Flores, Luis Fernando

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Sadoff, Robert L.

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John Wiley & Sons

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One of the most important events which characterizes the process of transitioning to the European Union is the ratification of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms by the European Council in 1950. Since then, the topic of human rights has become the inspiring principle in the construction of the European Community and afterwards the institutional apparatus which constitutes the Union. The primary objective of the European Union States currently is to promote a harmonization of the national legislations on mental health, favoring a central health policy which reduces inequalities amongst the member States. For this reason Europe is a region of the world in which is more abundant the normative one about mental health, especially in form of Recommendations directed to the States by the Council of Europe, although norms of direct application also exist. Special interest has the sentences dictated by the European Court of Human Rights and the conclusions of the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. It should be mentioned the work of European Union equally and of the Office for Europe of the World Organization of the Health. This group of juridical instruments configures the most complete regulation on the mental patient's rights.

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Valenti, E., & Barrios Flores, L. F. (2010). Mental Health and Human Rights in Forensic Psychiatry in the European Union. In R.L. Sadoff (Ed.), Ethical Issues in Forensic Psychiatry: Minimizing Harm (pp. 35-55). Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons.

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