Current policy and practice directed towards people with learning disabilities originates in the deinstitutionalisation processes, civil rights concerns and integrationist philosophies of the 1970s and 1980s. However, historians know little about the specific contexts within which these were mobilised. Although it is rarely acknowledged in the secondary literature, MIND was prominent in campaigning for rights-based services for learning disabled people during this time. This article sets MIND’s campaign within the wider historical context of the organisation’s origins as a main institution of the inter-war mental hygiene movement. The article begins by outlining the mental hygiene movement’s original conceptualisation of ‘mental deficiency’...
This article uses an historical perspective to explore how constructions of disability influenced po...
In recent years, the concepts of citizenship and social movements, especially the so-called new soci...
People with the label of "intellectual disabilities"1 are often objectified and devalued by master n...
During the 1970s the National Association for Mental Health (NAMH) re-labelled itself MIND, becoming...
This article traces and summarises historiographical trends in the history of learning disability. I...
Materialist historians of disability in Britain have tended to accept two premises about deinstituti...
Over the twentieth century, the Lunacy Office (renamed the Court of Protection in 1947) was responsi...
In this article, I address how the history of intellectual disability politics is made sense of in s...
The British Disabled People’s Movement’s (DPM’s) attempt to define disability as a social relationsh...
Recent activist memoirs and archival work has begun to challenge our understanding of the historical...
This dissertation examines contemporary politics targeting people with intellectual disabilities. Si...
In my analysis of rights and intellectual disability in the twentieth century United States, I argue...
After World War II, Dutch psychiatrists and other mental health care professionals articulated ideal...
This paper reviews the place of the ‘voice’ in the history of intellectual disability, drawing princ...
What happens when a group traditionally defined as lacking the necessary capacities of citizenship i...
This article uses an historical perspective to explore how constructions of disability influenced po...
In recent years, the concepts of citizenship and social movements, especially the so-called new soci...
People with the label of "intellectual disabilities"1 are often objectified and devalued by master n...
During the 1970s the National Association for Mental Health (NAMH) re-labelled itself MIND, becoming...
This article traces and summarises historiographical trends in the history of learning disability. I...
Materialist historians of disability in Britain have tended to accept two premises about deinstituti...
Over the twentieth century, the Lunacy Office (renamed the Court of Protection in 1947) was responsi...
In this article, I address how the history of intellectual disability politics is made sense of in s...
The British Disabled People’s Movement’s (DPM’s) attempt to define disability as a social relationsh...
Recent activist memoirs and archival work has begun to challenge our understanding of the historical...
This dissertation examines contemporary politics targeting people with intellectual disabilities. Si...
In my analysis of rights and intellectual disability in the twentieth century United States, I argue...
After World War II, Dutch psychiatrists and other mental health care professionals articulated ideal...
This paper reviews the place of the ‘voice’ in the history of intellectual disability, drawing princ...
What happens when a group traditionally defined as lacking the necessary capacities of citizenship i...
This article uses an historical perspective to explore how constructions of disability influenced po...
In recent years, the concepts of citizenship and social movements, especially the so-called new soci...
People with the label of "intellectual disabilities"1 are often objectified and devalued by master n...