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Contents

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 December 2025

Sjors Ligthart
Affiliation:
Utrecht University
Emma Dore-Horgan
Affiliation:
University College Cork
Gerben Meynen
Affiliation:
Utrecht University

Information

Type
Chapter
Information
Minds, Freedoms and Rights
On Neurorehabilitation in Criminal Justice
, pp. v - vi
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2026
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - ND
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Contents

  1. Acknowledgements

  2. 1Neurorehabilitation in Criminal Justice

    1. 1.1Introduction

    2. 1.2Setting the Stage: Criminal Justice, Crime Prevention and Rehabilitation

    3. 1.3Neuroprediction and Neurointervention

    4. 1.4Freedoms and Rights

  3. Part IThe Negative Dimension: Protection against Neurorehabilitation

    1. 2The Right to Personal Identity

      1. 2.1Introduction

      2. 2.2Normative Concerns about Brain Stimulation and Personal Identity

      3. 2.3Human Rights Protection of Personal Identity: The Case of Neurorehabilitation

      4. 2.4Concluding Remarks

    2. 3The Right to Personal Integrity

      1. 3.1Introduction

      2. 3.2Human Rights Protection of Personal Integrity

      3. 3.3Constructing the Right to Mental Integrity: Scope and Permissible Limitations

      4. 3.4Concluding Remarks

    3. 4The Right to Mental Privacy

      1. 4.1Introduction

      2. 4.2The Protection of Mental Privacy in Human Rights Law

      3. 4.3Towards a Threshold for the Right to Freedom of Thought?

      4. 4.4Concluding Remarks

  4. Part IIThe Positive Dimension: Arguments for Offering Neurorehabilitation

    1. 5The Right to Mental Self-Determination

      1. 5.1Introduction

      2. 5.2Legal and Moral Rationales for a Human Right to Mental Self-Determination

      3. 5.3A State Duty to Provide Neurorehabilitation?

      4. 5.4Concluding Remarks

    2. 6The Right to Mental Health

      1. 6.1Introduction

      2. 6.2Legal and Moral Bases of a Right to Mental Health

      3. 6.3What Is Mental Health? Considering the Scope of a Right to Mental Health

      4. 6.4A State Duty to Provide Neurorehabilitation?

      5. 6.5Concluding Remarks

    3. 7The Right to Rehabilitation

      1. 7.1Introduction

      2. 7.2Obligation to Enable Rehabilitation in Human Rights Law

      3. 7.3Rationales for a Right to Rehabilitation

      4. 7.4A State Duty to Provide Neurorehabilitation?

      5. 7.5Concluding Remarks

    4. 8Synthesis and Conclusion

      1. 8.1Introduction

      2. 8.2Plausibly Permissible Interventions

      3. 8.3Interventions of Which the Permissibility Is Unclear

      4. 8.4Plausibly Impermissible Interventions

      5. 8.5Closing Remarks

  5. References

  6. Index

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