Laws alone, of course, do not guarantee either freedom from abuse or access to services. It was often said of the old Soviet Union that, on paper, it had one of the finest systems imaginable for protecting the rights of its citizens. Law is only a first step, one that must be supported by a profession concerned with advancing patients' interests and by a society supportive of individual liberty. Thus it was heartening this spring to be present at a conclave, just outside Amsterdam, of nearly 200 reformers from the former communist world, most, though not all, psychiatrists. After several years of meetings sponsored and supported by Western groups, the participants assumed responsibility for the process themselves, creating the Association of Reformers in Psychiatry, adopting a constitution and by-laws, and electing their own officers.