A sociological overview of the development of the rights movement is provided. The movement arose to combat the oppressive marginalization of persons with disabilities. It sought both to empower them to take control of their own lives and to influence social policies and practices to further the inclusion of individuals with disabilities into the societal mainstream. It developed in three phases. In the first phase, a definition of both what the problem is and of what its sources are, was offered. In the second, a consensus was established and acted upon as to a collective solution to the problem. In the third phase, it responded to the aftermath of new policies and practices
Advocacy groups would shape disability culture and collective identity. These, in turn, would become...
In recent years, disability rights has emerged as an increasingly important political issue in Ghana...
There is lively discussion in the social sciences about minority groups and their claims for social ...
Tells a complex and compelling story of an ongoing movement that seeks to create an equitable and di...
The special issue Disability Movements: National Policies and Transnational Perspectives examines di...
Disabled people have a long history of struggle for liberation. This paper starts from a premise tha...
In earlier publications we suggested that the pursuit of a single aim or goal in disability politics...
Having gradually emerged during the late 1970s the (West) German Disability Rights Movement was "bor...
At the heart of the disability rights movement is the fact that people with disabilities want to be ...
Even though the study of disability rights advocacy has led to major contributions to ...
This paper reflects critically upon part of the findings of research about key activists’ experience...
The Disability Rights Movement, which emerged internationally as a major force operating to emancipa...
By the most inclusive count, 43 million Americans (17 percent of the population) has some form of di...
Produced by The Center on Disability Studies, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawai'i and ...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 1999 Margaret CooperThe Australian Disability Rights Move...
Advocacy groups would shape disability culture and collective identity. These, in turn, would become...
In recent years, disability rights has emerged as an increasingly important political issue in Ghana...
There is lively discussion in the social sciences about minority groups and their claims for social ...
Tells a complex and compelling story of an ongoing movement that seeks to create an equitable and di...
The special issue Disability Movements: National Policies and Transnational Perspectives examines di...
Disabled people have a long history of struggle for liberation. This paper starts from a premise tha...
In earlier publications we suggested that the pursuit of a single aim or goal in disability politics...
Having gradually emerged during the late 1970s the (West) German Disability Rights Movement was "bor...
At the heart of the disability rights movement is the fact that people with disabilities want to be ...
Even though the study of disability rights advocacy has led to major contributions to ...
This paper reflects critically upon part of the findings of research about key activists’ experience...
The Disability Rights Movement, which emerged internationally as a major force operating to emancipa...
By the most inclusive count, 43 million Americans (17 percent of the population) has some form of di...
Produced by The Center on Disability Studies, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawai'i and ...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 1999 Margaret CooperThe Australian Disability Rights Move...
Advocacy groups would shape disability culture and collective identity. These, in turn, would become...
In recent years, disability rights has emerged as an increasingly important political issue in Ghana...
There is lively discussion in the social sciences about minority groups and their claims for social ...