The conceptualization of legal capacity of older persons in western law

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Abstract

In Western jurisprudence, the concept of capacity is a legal presumption. It rests upon the assumption that each of us, at adulthood, is best able to decide what is in our best interest, and that we ought to be left alone to pursue our own choices (Sabatino and Basinger 2000). Incapacity is a term that defines when a state may take actions to shatter this presumption and limit the individual's right to make decisions about his or her person or property based on disability. Guardianship or conservatorship is the process in which this determination is normally made. Conceptually, incapacity may be seen as a legal fiction. This means that it is a construct treated as a fact, whether or not it is really so, because it is recognized as having utility. Here, we are referring to legal incapacity, and not clinical or de facto incapacity.

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Sabatino, C. P., & Wood, E. (2014). The conceptualization of legal capacity of older persons in western law. In Beyond Elder Law: New Directions in Law and Aging (pp. 35–55). Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-25972-2_3

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