Yega Muthu: Dworkin v Fish : Theoretical Premise of
Awarding Damages for Psychiatric Illness in England and Australia
Abstract: This
article examines the law of psychiatric illness in the light of Ronald
DworkinÕs and Stanley FishÕs legal theory. The article proposes to examine the
attitude of judges to judicial law making in England and Australia, the
jurisprudential contributions to the debate and the need for and the
justification of judge-made law in terms of rules, principles and policies.
Although there is recent scientific research explaining that mental health
causes actual trauma to brain cell structures, it seems unlikely that English
courts will adopt a similar stance to recognize this new development in
psychiatry. Dworkin is of the opinion that legal decisions must be justified
with a legal theory such as
Ôapplication of the methods of literary interpretation to legal texts.Õ
Dworkin explained his work by referring to policies, principles, rights, interpretations,
adjudication, pragmatism, conventionalism and integrity. His perception of law
is seen from an interpretive vantage point, in which policies, principles and
rights play a crucial role alongside positive law and most cases are settled on
the basis of Ôlike cases should be decided alike.Õ On the other hand, Fish
demonstrates how readers from a similar background or context will interpret a
text similarly, and thus that the reader, more than the text, determines what
the text says. Further he emphasises the reader as creator of texts, suggesting
that it is not different interpretive communities that cause diverging
interpretations of texts but simply different interpretations.
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