ISBN : 9780198801900
Depression is amorphous. It defies easy generalization, and eludes medical and legal categories. Is it part of the self, or its predator? Can a sufferer be held responsible for their actions? This edited collection provides a holistic study of a protean illness. If the law is to regulate the lives of those who suffer from depression, it is vital that lawyers understand the condition. Drawing upon a wide-ranging expertise, this volume looks at depression from four viewpoints: that of the sufferer, the clinician, the ethicist, and the lawyer. Topics covered include the cultural history of depression; causes, epidemiology, and diagnosis; the autonomy debate; criminal responsibility; public health law; depression in the workplace; depression and children; and assisted suicide. First-hand accounts from sufferers are followed by contributions from clinicians who say what depression is, outline its demography and therapeutic options, and indicate the legal and ethical problems that trouble them the most. The essays then go on to explore legal and ethical questions in depth. This collection is essential reading for lawyers seeking a broader understanding of depression, and non-lawyers seeking an insight into the difficulty law has engaging with the condition.
Part One: Sufferers
1 Iain McGilchrist: Depression is Like Nothing on Earth
2 Jay Griffiths: Tristimania
3 Charles Foster: On Being Not Depressed
Part Two: Clinical
4 Phil Cowen: Depression: Symptomatology, Diagnosis, and Classification
5 Theodoros Bargiotas: The Aetiology of Depression
6 German E Berrios and Ivana S Markova: A Cultural History of Depression
7 Gemma Lewis and Glyn Lewis: The Epidemiology of Depression
8 Anthony James: Depressive Disorders in Childhood and Adolescence
9 Julian C Hughes: Depression in the Ill and the Dying
10 Hugh Series: The Treatment of Depression: An Overview of the Physical Options
11 Chris Williams and David Osborne: Treatment: An Overview of Talking Therapies
Part Three: Ethics
12 Richard Ashcroft: Ethics and Depression: A Personal Perspective
13 Jesse Wall: Being Yourself: Authentic Decision-making and Depression
14 K W M (Bill) Fulford, David Crepaz-Keay, and Giovanni Stanghellini: Depressions Plural: Pathology and the Challenge of Values
15 Paul Biegler: Is Treating Depression Just Like Treating Appendicitis?
16 Rebecca Saracino, Melissa Masterson, and Barry Rosenfeld: The Impact of Depression on Healthcare Decisions: Autonomy, Capacity, and Competence
17 Harry Minas: Depression in the Developing World
Part Four: Law
18 Mary Donnelly: Depression and Consent to Treatment: The Limits of a Capacity-based Approach
19 John Coggon: Depression and Public Health Law: Ethics, Governance, and the Socio-Political Determinants of Health and Well-being
20 Hugh Series: Legal Regulation of Treatment for Depression
21 Arlie Loughnan: Depression in Criminal Law and Process
22 Charles Foster: Depression and Civil Liability
23 Alan Bogg and Sarah Green: Depression in the Workplace: An Employment Law Response
24 Jonathan Herring: Depression and Children
25 Richard Huxtable: Depression and Assisted Dying: Putting the Black Dog to Sleep?