A book about the defining assumptions and assumed definition of the welfare state. It argues that 'the concept of disability is fundamentally the result of political conflict about distributive criteria and the appropriate recipients of social aid'.
This text is very useful for understanding what one might refer to as the social construction of the category of disability. It is not anti-disability in any sense at all. The reviewer who criticized it as such profoundly misunderstands the volume and reads it in what seems to me a perverse way. Any one who wants to understand a public policy issue would be well advised to make use of this book.
To us, who are disabled?
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
This text is required reading in the Bryn Mawr College Master's program in Social Work. It is articulate, insightful, in depth, and nuanced. Her analysis covers a great deal of ground: it includes historical, political, and sociological analyses of our concept of the disabled as a category of people entitled to benefits.I do not see her at all as for or against the disabled. She says, "the very essence of society is providing help to those in need." She explains who we see as disabled, why we do so, and how we identify and validate each category within the broad notion of disabled.What I particularly enjoyed is her ability to identify similar ways that people have thought about aspects of disability across centuries of history.Highly recommended.
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