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2 of 15

Legal Capacity

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  • Legal capacity laws determine:
    • whether a person can make decisions for themselves and,
    • when someone else will be required to make decisions for them
  • A person is allowed to make decisions if they satisfy the legal criteria of “capacity” to do so
  • These criteria are often cognitive in nature
  • Being considered to be “capable” in law means a person has power to control their own decisions

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Slides

  1. Agenda

  2. Legal Capacity

  3. Legal Capacity: Implications for People with Communication Disabilities

  4. Laws Impacting the Exercise of Legal Capacity

  5. Capacity Laws: Capacity Criteria/Tests

  6. Features of Legal Capacity

  7. Capacity Assessment

  8. Decision-Making with Support People

  9. Substitute Decision-Making

  10. Equality and Accessibility – Legal Sources

  11. Human Rights Acts and the Duty to Accommodate

  12. Duty to Accommodate, Legal Capacity and People with Communication Disabilities

  13. Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms

  14. Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD)

  15. Session 3 Completed

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