Maeve O.!Rourke, PhD (Birmingham), LLM (Harvard), BCL (University College Dublin), is Assistant Professor of Human Rights at the Irish Centre for Human Rights, University of Galway, Ireland. She is also a Barrister at 33 Bedford Row, London. She is a member of the Young Academy Ireland, a former Harvard Law School Global Human Rights Fellow, and a former recipient of the UK Family Law Pro Bono Lawyer of the Year award for her research and advocacy alongside survivors of Ireland's twentieth century church/state and family separation abuses. She has authored and edited numerous publications on state responsibility for protecting human rights in the social care context. She directs the Human Rights Law Clinic at the Irish Centre for Human Rights.
In this timely and important book, Maeve O'Rourke eloquently and thoroughly confronts abuses and failings within the care of older persons with a focus on the imperative of dignity. In doing so, she offers vital insights on the always 'unfinished business' of the progressive interpretation of the right against torture and ill-treatment. This is an invaluable resource for human rights scholars and advocates alike. * Natasa Mavronicola, Professor of Human Rights Law, Birmingham Law School, University of Birmingham * Through the lens of human rights law and its prohibition against torture and ill-treatment, Dr. O'Rourke offers an eye-opening, mind-bending analysis of the state's obligations to the care of older people, whose dignity and rights are at risk every day. In this carefully researched, clear presentation, Dr. O'Rourke explores the jurisprudence of regional and international courts to clarify the vulnerability that stems from the powerlessness of older persons in care facilities and to identify what constitutes ill-treatment that amounts to a violation of international norms. Her book offers a new and important assessment of standards for consent and care, arguing that states must prevent 'dignity violations.' Published at the very moment when the international community is examining the prospect of a new treaty ensuring the rights of older persons, this authoritative account couldn't be more timely. * Felice Gaer, Director, Jacob Blaustein Institute for the Advancement of Human Rights *