221 DISABILITY RIGHTS AND COMPULSORY PSYCHIATRIC TREATMENT: THE CASE FOR A BALANCED APPROACH UNDER THE MENTAL HEALTH (COMPULSORY ASSESSMENT AND TREATMENT) ACT 1992 Toni Wharehoka * This article argues the New Zealand Government's current approach to compulsory psychiatric treatment is unjustifiable in a human rights context. Under s 59 of the Mental Health (Compulsory Assessment and Treatment) Act 1992, clinicians are empowered to administer compulsory psychiatric treatment to individuals without, or contrary to, their consent. This article analyses s 59, and its underlying justifications, in light of the New Zealand Government's commitments under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD). Further, it analyses the approach for compulsory psychiatric treatment advocated by the UNCRPD in light of Aotearoa New Zealand's mental health context to evaluate whether this approach would be more desirable than the current approach under s 59. The article then advocates for a more balanced approach to compulsory psychatric treatment which puts the rights of disabled individuals at the forefront and also ensures there are limits to these rights which are justifiable within a human rights context. I INTRODUCTION Aotearoa New Zealand has some of the most concerning mental health statistics in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). Every year, around one in five people experience a diagnosed mental illness or significant mental distress, and around 20,000 people * Taranaki and Te Ati Awa. Submitted for LLB (Honours) Degree, Victoria University of Wellington 2020.