The Court of Protection Practice retains its well-established format as the leading court reference work governing this fast-developing jurisdiction, with a status akin to its sister publication The Red Book.
It contains, in a single portable volume, all the essential materials needed to practice in the Court of Protection (ie Narrative, Procedural Guides, Mental Capacity Act 2005, Procedure Rules, SIs, Forms, Precedents, Case Summaries, International materials), thus providing a comprehensive ‘one-stop-shop which ensures that practitioners have all the latest developments at their fingertips.
This new edition has been further enhanced and updated throughout to take account of the reissued Court of Protection Rules which took effect in December 2017 and thereby recast all of the Rules into the same format as the Civil Procedure and Family Procedure Rules.
The new-look Court of Protection Rules also incorporate those rules relating to case management which have hitherto been implemented by way of the Case Management Pilot. Accompanying, renumbered, Practice Directions also cement into the practice of the Court the Transparency Pilot and the Section 49 Report Pilot.
As the jurisdiction evolves, it is vital for practitioners to have up-to-date information in order to act efficiently and accurately for clients.
What’s New for 2018
- Part I – Narrative Chapters:
- Chapter 7 (Deprivation of Liberty) — Updated to include coverage of the Law Commission Recommendations
- Chapter 8 (Court Practice and Procedure) — Extensive amendment pursuant to new Court of Protection Rules
- Chapter 10 (Representation and Participation of P) — Completely new chapter on this important topic
- Chapter 12 (International protection of Adults) — Extensively updated with a new “Ordinary Residence” section added
- Part II Procedural Guides
- New flowcharts on mixed pathways; P and A pathways and Welfare pathways added
- Part IV – COP Rules and PDs
- New rules with comprehensively updated commentary
- Part IX – Cases
- Fully updated to include latest case-law