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DISABILITY AND SOCIETY: A READER
edited by Renu Addlakha, Stuart
Blume, Patrick Devlieger, Osamu Nagase and Myriam
Winance
[available with Orient BlackSwan, 2009]
In the 1 980s and 1 990s disabled scholars in the
West began to develop a radical critique of
biomedical conceptions of disability that focused
exclusively on the individual
body and its limitations. They also exposed the
failure of the social sciences to critically address
what this medical understanding of disability meant,
and what it excluded from consideration. Out of
their work emerged what is generally called the
'social model' of disability. Over the past twenty
years this perspective has generated a substantial
literature, much of it making use of the methods of
qualitative social research. Narratives and life
histories produced by disabled people themselves
have a central place in the Disability Studies
literature. This work has major implications for
professionals in the rehabilitation field, for the
social sciences, and the ultimate goal, for the full
integration of disabled people into society. However
almost all of it focuses on the traditions,
practices and dilemmas of northern countries.
In India, in Thailand and in most of Asia, the field
of disability continues to be dominated by the
biomedical model.
Thus, 'disability' is understood as an incurable
chronic illness and, increasingly, an object for
medical diagnosis and investigation. Despite many
positive developments, little convergence between
disability politics and practice on the one hand,
and sociology and anthropology on the other has
taken place. Surveying the international literature
on disability and rehabilitation, it becomes
apparent that many studies carried out in Asian
countries are designed to measure the extent of
(unmet) need or the impact of services or attitudes
to disabled people. Virtually no studies make use of
the innovative, usually qualitative and often
holistic approaches developed in Western countries
over the past twenty years.
This book introduces readers in Asian countries to
the recent disability literature of the West. The
editors hope that it will inspire new thinking among
social scientists, rehabilitation professionals and
organisations of disabled people themselves that
could further the empowerment of people with
disabilities.
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