Disability benefits function by demarcating categories of need (the administrative category of disability) and determine eligibility using assessments of functioning. In the UK, these assessments are the Work Capability Assessment and PIP assessment. Inherently technical and abstruse processes, these assessments have been opportune sites for welfare reform in recent years. Disability benefits have also been a central point of contention between disability studies and sociology. Sociology has traditionally favoured an ‘incomes approach’ and called for more adequate financial support from the state. Early figures in the disabled people’s movement rejected this position, and aligned with an oppression paradigm, argued for a more radical econom...
This paper presents a critique of the legal constitution of disability employed by the Disability Di...
Over the last two decades disability activists have established the social model of disability as a ...
While behavioural conditionality for disability benefit claimants has been increasing, there is litt...
Disability benefits function by demarcating categories of need (the administrative category of disab...
Background: Anti-welfare narratives depict welfare systems as overly-permissive, open to fraud, and ...
This thesis examines how legal processes in the administration of Personal Independence Payment (PIP...
This chapter canvases a number of ways that issues surrounding disability intersect with social epis...
This thesis is concerned with the relationship between the political economy and UK governments’ app...
This paper explores the potential of the perspective of epistemic injustice to reconcile medical soc...
Current trends in Disability Studies hint at an overemphasis on the social model. Much description a...
This review provides a meta-synthesis of qualitative literature pertaining to the experiences of ind...
The chapter discusses the social construction of disability presenting the main elements in the deba...
Critical researchers enter into an investigation with their assumptions on the table, so no one is c...
Disability classification systems belong to the core of states’ social/disability policies through w...
This paper presents a critique of the legal constitution of disability employed by the Disability Di...
Over the last two decades disability activists have established the social model of disability as a ...
While behavioural conditionality for disability benefit claimants has been increasing, there is litt...
Disability benefits function by demarcating categories of need (the administrative category of disab...
Background: Anti-welfare narratives depict welfare systems as overly-permissive, open to fraud, and ...
This thesis examines how legal processes in the administration of Personal Independence Payment (PIP...
This chapter canvases a number of ways that issues surrounding disability intersect with social epis...
This thesis is concerned with the relationship between the political economy and UK governments’ app...
This paper explores the potential of the perspective of epistemic injustice to reconcile medical soc...
Current trends in Disability Studies hint at an overemphasis on the social model. Much description a...
This review provides a meta-synthesis of qualitative literature pertaining to the experiences of ind...
The chapter discusses the social construction of disability presenting the main elements in the deba...
Critical researchers enter into an investigation with their assumptions on the table, so no one is c...
Disability classification systems belong to the core of states’ social/disability policies through w...
This paper presents a critique of the legal constitution of disability employed by the Disability Di...
Over the last two decades disability activists have established the social model of disability as a ...
While behavioural conditionality for disability benefit claimants has been increasing, there is litt...