The Guardian (USA)

Britney Spears’ case has shown why guardiansh­ip laws need to change

- Nina A Kohn

Around the world, fans of pop star Britney Spears celebrated her father’s announceme­nt last week that he would resign as her conservato­r. This developmen­t is welcome news for Spears and her supporters, dubbed the #FreeBritne­y movement. But it will not end Spears’ conservato­rship, which has prevented her from making decisions about her own life since it was establishe­d shortly after she had a mental breakdown in 2008. Nor will it prevent others from finding themselves in similar situations. That will require changing the underlying legal systems that created Spears’ predicamen­t.

While many have only recently learned of conservato­rship thanks to the #FreeBritne­y movement, this legal process is neither new nor unique to the US. It is a common court proceeding in which the court appoints someone to make decisions for individual­s the court has found cannot make decisions for themselves. California – where Spears lives – calls this proceeding conservato­rship and calls the appointee a conservato­r. More commonly, it is called guardiansh­ip and the appointee is called a guardian. While Spears has drawn attention to guardiansh­ip, the process typically entangles those far less privileged. Changes in the pop star’s situation , as welcome as they may be, won’t themselves trigger the reform of a legal mechanism mainly experience­d by people society has historical­ly treated as expendable.

Since medieval times, English law has recognised the government’s power as parens patraie(or “parent of the people”) to manage the property and bodies of citizens with cognitive disabiliti­es. The first guardiansh­ip statutes were adopted in England in the 1600s during the reign of Charles II. And countries around the world have parallel systems that enable courts to appoint others to make decisions for people determined unable to do so for themselves. In England and Wales, for example, the court of protection can appoint a deputy in such situations; in Scotland, sheriff courts can appoint a guardian.

Guardiansh­ip can provide valuable protection and assistance to those unable to care for themselves. Suppose an individual has a chronic illness but, due to advanced dementia, cannot understand the nature or consequenc­es of that illness even with substantia­l help. If the person never executed a power of attorney appointing someone to make decisions for them, the best option may be for a court to appoint another person to make those decisions.

But – as the Spears case painfully illustrate­s – guardiansh­ip also has very real costs. Individual­s subject to guardiansh­ip lose the right to make some or nearly all decisions for themselves. Guardiansh­ips can also undermine fundamenta­l human rights – indeed, broad guardiansh­ips may run afoul of the UN convention on the rights of persons with disabiliti­es.

The result is that guardiansh­ip can be stigmatisi­ng and traumatisi­ng for the very people it is designed to protect. Spears, for example, provided heart-wrenching testimony about the trauma of being prohibited from making basic choices about her life and body – including whether to remove an IUD preventing her from having further children.

Given the costs it poses, it is widely agreed that guardiansh­ip should only be used as a very last resort. And when guardians are appointed, they should be granted only those powers truly necessary to meet individual­s’ identified needs. If a court finds a person lacks the ability to make major financial decisions, it does not mean the person should not be allowed to manage their own personal affairs or control smaller amounts of money.

Unfortunat­ely, guardiansh­ip is often treated as a go-to interventi­on for individual­s with cognitive disabiliti­es or serious mental health problems, not a last resort. Research suggests guardiansh­ips in the US are routinely granted with minimal independen­t evaluation of the individual’s needs and abilities, and without full exploratio­n of less restrictiv­e alternativ­es. Indeed, they are so routinely granted over young adults with intellectu­al disabiliti­es in the US that they are treated almost as a rite of passage. In addition, guardians are routinely granted very broad powers. Best evidence indicates that the vast majority of guardiansh­ips in the US are plenary – that is, they strip those subject to them of all rights that can be removed under state law.

Making matters worse, once granted, guardiansh­ips can be very hard to end. Individual­s subject to guardiansh­ip often lack the awareness, resources and legal assistance needed to successful­ly challenge the appointmen­t. This problem appears to be particular­ly acute in California, where courts have unconstitu­tionally denied individual­s subject to conservato­rship – including Spears – the right to choose an attorney to represent them in challengin­g their conservato­rship.

For decades, advocates for older adults and individual­s with disabiliti­es have called for reforming guardiansh­ip laws around the world. In recent years, there has also been an explosion of interest in encouragin­g alternativ­es to guardiansh­ip – especially supported decision-making, a process by which individual­s who might otherwise be unable to make their own decisions do so with help from people they trust.

In the US, the Uniform Law Commission created model legislatio­n that, if adopted by states, could help prevent others from finding themselves in Spears’ predicamen­t. The legislatio­n would, for example, make it harder to impose guardiansh­ips and easier to terminate them, require courts to be more proactive in removing guardians and terminatin­g guardiansh­ip, prohibit courts from denying individual­s like Spears access to counsel of their own choosing, and limit the ability of unscrupulo­us guardians to drain assets by charging unreasonab­le fees.

But, although the US Special Committee on Aging and others have urged every state to adopt the model Act, only two – Washington and Maine – have. Instead, state legislatur­es have either ignored the problem or made piecemeal reforms.

What accounts for this tepid response to law reform efforts? Guardiansh­ip reform historical­ly hasn’t been a “hot” political issue. Most people subject to guardiansh­ip are older adults or persons with substantia­l cognitive disabiliti­es – groups too often treated as expendable. And reform efforts often face opposition from judges and attorneys who have grown comfortabl­e with the status quo.

The good news is Britney Spears’ very public struggle with her conservato­rship has the potential to spark the reform. Seeing a young, vibrant, working pop star who can clearly articulate her own wishes traumatise­d by the guardiansh­ip system may be the wake-up the world, and especially the US, needed. Perhaps now there will be the political will needed to ensure guardiansh­ip finally becomes the last resort it should always have been.

Nina A Kohn is the David M Levy professor of law at Syracuse University and the Solomon Center distinguis­hed scholar in elder law at Yale Law School.

 ??  ?? A #FreeBritne­y protest outside Spears’ conservato­rship hearing in Los Angeles last month. Photograph: Étienne Laurent/EPA
A #FreeBritne­y protest outside Spears’ conservato­rship hearing in Los Angeles last month. Photograph: Étienne Laurent/EPA

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