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7 Afr. Disability Rts. Y.B. 3 (2019)

handle is hein.journals/afdry7 and id is 1 raw text is: 






                                      RATHER BAD THAN MAD?
                       A   RECONSIDERATION OF CRIMINAL
                          INCAPACITY AND PSYCHOSOCIAL
                     DISABILITY IN SOUTH AFRICAN LAW
                 IN   LIGHT OF THE CONVENTION ON THE
                 RIGHTS OF PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES



                                                        Heline  Combrinck*



Summary

Article 12(2) of the Convention on the Rights ofPersons with Disabilities requires
the recognition that persons with disabilities enjoy legal capacity on an equal basis
with others in all aspects of life. Such acknowledgment implies that state parties to
the Convention, including South Africa, will have to reassess their existing legal
provisions relating to legal capacity. These legal measures typically include a rule to
the effect that where a person accused of a criminal offence lacks criminal capacity
as a result ofan intellectual orpsychosocial disability, he or she cannot be held liable
in criminal law (often referred to as the 'insanity defence). This article examines the
potential influence ofthe recognition ofuniversal legal capacity in the CRPD on the
insanity defence, with specific emphasis on the current position in South African
law. It commences  with an overview of the normative content of article 12 of the
CRPD as it   relates to the notion of criminal capacity and also considers the
interpretations of this provision as proposed by academic commentators. These
interpretations may be described as, first, an abolitionist position (calling for both
the elimination of the insanity defence and the concomitant mandatory committal
of the accused to forensic psychiatric institutions) and, second, an integrationist
position (suggesting the development  of disability-neutral rules on criminal
capacity). A third approach strongly argues in favour of retaining the insanity
defence while at the same time reconsidering the institutionalisation of an accused
person following an acquittal based on this defence. The present South African
legislative dispensation regarding criminal capacity is subsequently examined and
measured  against the CRPD. The  article concludes with a number ofobservations
in view ofpotential law reform.





*   B lur LLB  Honns BA  (North-West University) LLM (Cape Town) LLD (Western
    Cape); Associate Professor, Faculty of Law, North-West University, South Africa.

H Combrinck 'Rather bad than mad? A reconsideration of criminal incapacity and psychosocial disability
in South African law in light of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities' (2018) 6 Afiican
          Disability Rights Yearbook 3-26 http://doi.org/10.29053/2413-7138/2018/v6al
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