The Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law


 

 

About the Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law

For three decades, the Judge David L. Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law has been the nation's leading legal advocate for people with mental disabilities. Our precedent-setting litigation has outlawed institutional abuse and won protections against arbitrary confinement. In the courts and in Congress, our advocacy has opened up public schools, workplaces, housing and other opportunities for people with mental disabilities to participate in community life.

Our Mission


The mission of the Judge David L. Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law is to protect and advance the rights of adults and children who have mental disabilities. The Center envisions an America where people who have mental illnesses or developmental disabilities exercise their own life choices and have access to the resources that enable them to participate fully in their communities.

Our Work

Our advocacy is based on the principle that every individual is entitled to choice and dignity. For many people with mental disabilities, this means something as basic as having a decent place to live, supportive services and equality of opportunity. The Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law uses a coordinated approach of litigation, policy analysis, coalition-building, public information and technical support for local advocates in four broad areas of advocacy:

  • Advancing Community Membership
    Community membership means enabling people with mental disabilities to participate equally with other members of the community - as residents of neighborhoods and members of families, contributing as part of the workforce and enjoying the social, recreational, political, educational and cultural benefits of community life.
  • Promoting Self-Determination
    People with mental disabilities have the right to be independent, free from coercion and invasion of privacy. This includes economic self-sufficiency and the ability to vote for the leaders whose decisions will affect their lives. It also means that individuals should have a voice in their treatment decisions and control over who has access to their treatment records.
  • Ending the Punishment of People with Mental Illnesses for the System's Failures
    The Bazelon Center believes that jailing or forcing outpatient treatment on people with mental illnesses is a poor substitute for adequate mental health and supportive services and that families should not have to relinquish custody of children with emotional disorders in order to access needed treatment. We are committed to the idea that people with mental disabilities should not be punished for the system's failures to provide access to the resources they need for stable lives and meaningful participation in the community.
  • Preserving Rights
    Recent judicial decisions and regulatory revisions in a changing political climate threaten to erode important protections and entitlements for people with disabilities in the areas of housing, health care, education and civil rights. We will continue to defend the rights won by people with mental disabilities in recent decades.

How We Do It

More Information

Ensuring Community Membership:
How our work makes a difference and what challenges we face

Precedent-Setting Litigation
Bazelon Center attorneys provide technical support on mental health law issues and co-counsel selected lawsuits with private lawyers, legal services programs, ACLU chapters and state protection and advocacy systems (P&As).

Unfortunately, the Bazelon Center lacks the necessary resources and expertise on each state's laws and regulations to handle individual requests for information or assistance. If you need help with your case, please look up your state Protection and Advocacy system on the website of the National Disability Rights Network.

Policy Advocacy
We collaborate with local, regional and national advocacy and consumer organizations to reform public systems and promote consumer participation in the design and operation of service programs. We're also active in national policy coalitions working to preserve and expand programs that assure children and adults with mental disabilities of choice and dignity.

Public Education
We publish handbooks, manuals, issue papers and reports explaining key legal and policy issues in everyday terms and highlight issues related to mental health law in the media.

Our History

The Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law was founded in 1972 by a group of committed lawyers and professionals in mental health and mental retardation. Known until 1993 as the Mental Health Law Project, our name today honors the federal appeals court judge whose landmark decisions pioneered the field of mental health law.

Throughout 30 years of landmark advocacy, the Bazelon Center has led the way in efforts to define and advance the rights of people with mental disabilities in a number of areas, including:

The Right to Treatment
Before 1972, people with mental disabilities were often simply warehoused in remote state psychiatric hospitals and so-called training schools. Our work in the Willowbrook case in New York and Wyatt v. Stickney in Alabama set minimum standards for physical conditions, staffing and safeguards of human rights in psychiatric and mental retardation institutions (1972) and ultimately mandated community care for residents.

The Right to Services in the Most Integrated Setting
In the Dixon case, the Bazelon Center helped establish the right to receive treatment in the least restrictive setting for people with mental disabilities' in Washington, DC. Our work to secure the Supreme Court's landmark decision in Olmstead v. L.C (1999) took a major step toward affirming that right nationally.The Bazelon Center's advocacy has also helped secure protections in the Americans with Disabilities Act for people with mental disabilities against discrimination in the community.

The Right to Live in the Community
The Fair Housing Amendments Act of 1988 is an essential protection for people with mental disabilities from housing discrimination. The Bazelon Center was instrumental in assuring inclusion of people with mental illnesses under the law and in defeating efforts to repeal the law (1998-1999).

The Right to Education
The Bazelon Center played a key role in establishing the right of all children with disabilities to appropriate education through America's public schools - first in Mills v Board of Education (1972) and in subsequent decades in enacting and preserving this right through the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.

The Right to Federal Entitlements
In Minnesota Mental Health Association v. Schweiker and City of New York v. Bowen, the Bazelon Center won decisions ending the Social Security Administration's (SSA) use of arbitrary criteria to decide applicants' eligibility for federal disability benefits on the basis of a mental impairment (1983-5). We worked with SSA to draft new standards for evaluating mental disability with the result that hundreds of thousands of adults and children were able to secure crucial economic support and access to Medicaid (1984-1988).

For a more comprehensive list of our accomplishments, please see our handout, "30 Years of Landmark Advocacy" or purchase Civil Rights and Human Dignity: 30 Years of Advocacy by the Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law by Lee Carty

Frequently Asked Questions

 

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  Judge David L. Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law
1101 15th Street, NW, Suite 1212
Washington, DC 20005

Phone: 202-467-5730
Fax: 202-223-0409
Email: webmaster@bazelon.org

 
Judge David L. Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law
1101 15th Street, NW, Suite 1212
Washington, DC 20005

Phone: 202-467-5730
Fax: 202-223-0409
Email: webmaster@bazelon.org