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Finding a Voice of Their Own: Exploring Disability Identity and the Articulation of Disability Rights through the Narratives of Young Adults with Physical Disabilities. Keynote #1 Minnesota Symposium in Disability Studies January 27, 2011. Marginalization of People with Physical Disabilities.
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Finding a Voice of Their Own: Exploring Disability Identity and the Articulation of Disability Rights through the Narratives of Young Adults with Physical Disabilities Keynote #1 Minnesota Symposium in Disability Studies January 27, 2011
Marginalization of People with Physical Disabilities • Diminished labour market participation • Higher Poverty rates. • Lower educational levels. • Results in what Dianne Pothier and Richard Devlin have referred to as “dis-citizenship”.
Narrative Methodology • Originates in Law and Society research. • Captures lived experience to suggest possibilities of legal strategies or political reforms by giving voice to marginalized groups. • Attempts to give participants in study a voice in knowledge creation. • Increasingly used in feminist theory, critical race theory and queer theory scholarship.
Sample Profile • In-depth qualitative 1-2 hour interviews with mostly young adult post-secondary students with mobility impairments, aged 18-24. • Conducted by myself and my Research Assistants. • Replicates landmark study done by Frank Munger and David Engel called Rights of Inclusion: Law and Identity in the Life Stories of Americans with Disabilities. • Uses Life Narrative Methodology and open-ended question structure.
Feedback by Participants • Munger and Engel gave participants the opportunity to comment on their analysis. • Attempt to cede power to the participants of the study. • Can be seen as analogous to Participatory Action Research (PAR) that seeks to allow participants to direct research and which has been endorsed by NIDRR.
Findings of Rights of Inclusion • Study of Americans with mobility and learning disabilities who never filed a human rights complaint. • Recursive relationship between rights and identity. • Identity and rights are mutually constitutive and contingent: acquisition of a disability identity can facilitate contexts in which rights become active but the emergence of rights can also facilitate the growth of a disability identity.
Rights and Identity • Enactment of disability rights laws can transform individuals’ self-perception as private troubles become public problems and individuals learn to reject stigma. • Enactment of disability rights laws spawn cultural shifts that transform how others regard people with disabilities. • Rights may generate institutional transformations.
My Study Methodology • Dozen men and women from three post-secondary institutions. • Primarily used the access services office at the institution to facilitate recruitment. • Participants interviewed at a campus office or at their residence. • Opportunity to comment on analysis. • Conducted Focus Groups for men and women. • Fifty percent of original participants took part in focus groups.
Methodology II • Small number of students over 24 (all women) were recruited from Institution C. • Seven men and five women. • Diagnostic conditions included cerebral palsy, spina bifida, and injuries acquired in motor vehicle accidents. • Several participants disclosed they also had learning disabilities and/or psychiatric disabilities. • Did not interview full time workers nor long term social assistance recipients.
Detailed Profile Data • All nine of the participants under age 24 were born with disabilities: five had cerebral palsy and two had spina bifida. • Five of the twelve participants use attendant services for activities of daily living. • Majority of sample use a wheelchair some or all of the time.
Topics Addressed • childhood experiences and friendships • barriers in driving and in using public transit • integration in the public school setting • relationships with siblings • work and/or volunteer experiences • post-secondary education experiences
Topics Addressed #2 • accessing the social assistance program for people with disabilities in Ontario known as ODSP • experiences at summer camps for children with disabilities • Formation of an identity as a disabled person.
Social Model of Disablement • Research grounded in idea that structural barriers are the primary cause of marginalization of people with disabilities. • Seeks to critically examine narratives through the lens of disability equality and disability discrimination. • Raises questions of how appropriate social model is for life experiences of students with disabilities
Integration in School Settings • Despite Charter values, some parents had to fight for integration of their children. • Anecdotally, children who grew up in rural areas seem to be more integrated than urban children. • Parental attitudes and resources seemed to play a role in integration as higher income parents could more easily fight for it.
Presence vs. Substantive Equality • EAs were often given tasks apart from accommodating students with disabilities. • One participant reported the principal refused to hire an EA to discourage him from attending resulting in mother acting as EA. • Reflection of neo-liberal cutbacks in educational system. • Men’s focus group identified continuity of EAs as one policy solution.
Harassment by Pupils • Female participant (Lisa) reported verbal abuse and/or being spat on by both female and male students. • One participant reported physical violence by neo-Nazi gang. • Tendency of school administrators to attempt to mediate bullying on the basis of disability.
Physical Barriers • Elevators constantly broken in Lisa’s case. • School teachers prohibited from carrying her up and down the stairs. • Pupils such as Lisa were discouraged from using elevator was working because it might stop working while she was upstairs. • Lisa was required to demonstrate her ability to climb stairs in front of school PT and principal.
Transportation Barriers • Only one of nine of the younger participants possessed a driver’s license and drove even though many physically could drive. • Financial barriers to obtaining a vehicle and paying for parking and gas. • Difficult for students away from home to find hand controlled vehicles to practice yet lack of attendant services at home. • Lack of time for teenager with physical, learning and psychiatric disabilities to drive.
Various Transportation Barriers • Graduated Licensing System creates new barriers by requiring additional driver. • Cost of adaptive equipment was also a barrier. • Chronically late paratransit systems. • Must be booked long in advance. • Harassment and insensitivity by both bus drivers and fellow passengers on regular bus system.
Taxi Barriers • Illegal price gouging by wheelchair accessible taxi cabs. • Shortage of accessible taxis. • Insensitive cab drivers.
Solutions • Encourage EA Continuity: legislative amendment to regulations or potential Charter challenge to regulations regarding Individual Education Plans. • Encourage teenagers to learn driving while in high school. • Mandatory sensitivity and human rights training for public transportation workers.