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Models of Disability

Models of Disability. April 8 th , 2008. Review of Last Class. Language Person First Language Pride Language Basic Concepts Ablism Overcoming Pity Super Crip Definitions Impairment Handicap Disability. Models of Disability. Moral Personal Tragedy Medical Social. Moral Model.

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Models of Disability

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  1. Models of Disability April 8th, 2008

  2. Review of Last Class • Language • Person First Language • Pride Language • Basic Concepts • Ablism • Overcoming • Pity • Super Crip • Definitions • Impairment • Handicap • Disability

  3. Models of Disability • Moral • Personal Tragedy • Medical • Social

  4. Moral Model • Two Parts • Religious and Spiritual origin • Punishment from God (ie: due to displeasure) • Evil spirits (possessed) • Witchcraft • Bad Karma (did something evil in the past) • Gift from God (cross to bear, angelic) • Character weakness • Corruptness • Immoral-ness • Examples: villains in movies, refrigerator mothers, faking, unmotivated

  5. Moral Model (cont.) • 2nd part of moral model: • Character weakness • Corruptness • Immoral-ness • Examples: villains in movies, refrigerator mothers, faking, unmotivated

  6. Personal Tragedy Model • Disability is considered a tragedy • Society needs to take care and protect persons with disabilities • If someone with a disability achieves something that a “normal” person does, then the person with a disability is looked at as inspirational (super crip) • This is often mixed with the Moral and Medical Models • Examples: inspiration news story, telethons, charities

  7. Medical Model • An individual with a disability has a physical or mental impairment • The disability is within a person • Focus is on minimizing or eliminating the impairment • Examples: think bell curve, rehabilitation, pharmaceuticals

  8. Social Model • Instead of disability originates within the person, disability originates from society • Disability results from barriers in society and the environment • Physical barriers • Attitudinal barriers

  9. Disability Activists (UK)1976(UPIAS - Union of Physically Impaired Against Segregation) • Disability: • “the disadvantage or restrictionof activity caused by a contemporary social organization which takes no or little account of people who have physical impairments and thus excludes them from the mainstream of social activities” • Changes the focus of disability away from the individual to Society. (1st articulation of the “Social Model of Disability”)

  10. Social Model States that inappropriate and discriminatory • Social Attitudes (Ableism), • Sociopolitical Structures, and • Cultural Phenomena are the central problem for disabled people

  11. Social (Creation)- UK Social (Construction)- US Minority (Political/Cultural) Independent Living Model- ILM Human Variation Post-Modern / Dismodern Social Model Variants

  12. Social Model Variants - Social (Creation) • UK • The historical convergence of industrialization and capitalism as restricting impaired people’s access to material and social goods, which results in their economic dependency and creates the category of disability • Marxist and materialist interpretation of the world

  13. Social Model Variants - Social (Construction) • US • Assumes that inappropriate and discriminatory social attitudes and cultural phenomena are the central problem for people with impairments

  14. Social Model Variants - Minority • Inappropriate and discriminatory social attitudes, sociopolitical structures - cultural phenomena are the central problem for disabled people • political based used to counter discrimination and advocate for civil rights • disABILITY identity / Pride / Culture

  15. Social Model Variants – Independent Living Model (ILM) • States that current sociopolitical structures produce access barriers for and dependency in impaired people resulting in disability • is based on a consumer driven movement that fosters autonomy, self-help and the removal of societal barriers and disincentives

  16. Social Model Variants – Human Variation • Universal Design • re-think= The built environment; economic, social, cultural, and political entities including organizations that provide employment, education, health care, transportation, communication, and the full range of public services.

  17. Social Model Variants – Postmodern Theory • sees disability as constructed via discursive practices (Talk / write=create disability) • perceives disability identity as fluid and its boundaries dependent on context and the dynamic interaction of other self-identities • emphasizes a dialogic relation between impairment and disability (not an analytical privileging of one over the other)

  18. "Through framing disability, through conceptualizing, categorizing, and counting disability, we create it.” Higgins, Paul. (1992) Pp. 6-7 Making Disability: Exploring the Social Transformation of Human Variation. Springfield, Il: Charles C. Thomas

  19. Social Model Variants – Dismodern Theory • L. Davis • Sees imperfection as the norm • Normal is a fairly new term…

  20. Social Model Variants – Summary • disability is restricted activity (caused by social barriers) • 2. disability is a form of social oppression • 3. disability is created by categorizing bodies/minds as normal or abnormal

  21. Initially: Social model tries to breaks the bio-medical chain of causation: Impairment Disability Why was this strategically important to DRM (Disability Rights Movement)?

  22. While the social model redefines “disability,” it stops short of questioning the status of “impairment” • Impairment is a necessary condition for disability. • Impairment is a “real entity,” a condition of the body, which remains the exclusive domain of medical interpretation and/or intervention. • Minimizes the experience of impairments

  23. Models – Summary • Problem is the Individual • Moral • Personal Tragedy • Medical • Problem is Society • Social

  24. Why should we care? • How Disability Is Defined Determines What Is Measured • Policy implications • Allocation of resources

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