This article addresses disability-related theory and research associated to attitudes and social action, equality of opportunity, respect and inclusion. It highlights the significance of disability in counselling psychology and that counselling psychologists (as other such professionals) need to be mindful of the wider disability issues that may be related to even those clients who do not apparently present with disabilities. Issues of terminology and conceptualisation of the terms disability versus handicap are then addressed. Linking issues of equality of opportunity, inclusion & respect to disability, as a psychosocial construct, leads to the exploration of individuals owning their own and their families’ disabilities and, consequent...
Down the ages, we see disability is as curse or punishment. With the development of science and soci...
This article is both an attempt to analyse disability, as a precise aspect of suffering, and also a ...
In this thesis I explore why disabled people often feel socially estranged and how this issue might...
© 2015 Australian Psychological Society. Objective: This paper outlines different approaches to...
Purpose: Clinical psychology and disability studies have traditionally occupied very different acade...
Individuals with disabilities have been largely ignored from research and training in the field of P...
People with an intellectual disability experience the same range of emotional and mental needs as th...
Purpose: Clinical psychology and disability studies have traditionally occupied very different acade...
This chapter looks at why, and how, a clinical psychologist might work with a person with intellectu...
The need for training counsellors specifically for intervention with the physically handicapped is t...
This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published arti...
The recent enforcement of disability discrimination legislation (DDA, 1995) has put the recruitment ...
This paper provides a framework for rehabilitation counsellors to respond to persons with disabiliti...
Down the ages, we see disability is as curse or punishment. With the development of science and soci...
Purpose: The purpose of this article is to review the conceptual and clinical similarities that exis...
Down the ages, we see disability is as curse or punishment. With the development of science and soci...
This article is both an attempt to analyse disability, as a precise aspect of suffering, and also a ...
In this thesis I explore why disabled people often feel socially estranged and how this issue might...
© 2015 Australian Psychological Society. Objective: This paper outlines different approaches to...
Purpose: Clinical psychology and disability studies have traditionally occupied very different acade...
Individuals with disabilities have been largely ignored from research and training in the field of P...
People with an intellectual disability experience the same range of emotional and mental needs as th...
Purpose: Clinical psychology and disability studies have traditionally occupied very different acade...
This chapter looks at why, and how, a clinical psychologist might work with a person with intellectu...
The need for training counsellors specifically for intervention with the physically handicapped is t...
This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published arti...
The recent enforcement of disability discrimination legislation (DDA, 1995) has put the recruitment ...
This paper provides a framework for rehabilitation counsellors to respond to persons with disabiliti...
Down the ages, we see disability is as curse or punishment. With the development of science and soci...
Purpose: The purpose of this article is to review the conceptual and clinical similarities that exis...
Down the ages, we see disability is as curse or punishment. With the development of science and soci...
This article is both an attempt to analyse disability, as a precise aspect of suffering, and also a ...
In this thesis I explore why disabled people often feel socially estranged and how this issue might...