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Article
Sterilization, State Action, and the Concept of Consent
Law & Psychology Review
  • Monroe E. Price, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law
  • Robert A. Burt, University of Michigan
Publication Date
1-1-1975
Abstract

A line demarking the propriety of state intervention into the lives of individuals has never been adequately drawn. It is not surprising that such a line is practically nonexistent, from the point of view of legal analysis, when the people subject to intervention are considered mentally retarded. Too infrequently the medical and privacy rights of these individuals go unrecognized and unheeded. There are several factors which collectively account for this.

Publisher
University of Alabama School of Law
Keywords
  • Disability,
  • Sterilization,
  • Psychology
Citation Information
Monroe E. Price and Robert A. Burt. "Sterilization, State Action, and the Concept of Consent" Law & Psychology Review Vol. 1 (1975) p. 57
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/monroe-price/32/