This article questions the reason behind ethics in caregiving services for people with serious intellectual disabilities, the reasons changes have taken place in medicine, in the kinds of illnesses, social changes and changes in how hospitality is envisioned, which lead us to reconsider the usual way of doing things, the traditional morals on which their treatment has been based. However, the traditional ways of dealing with those disabled individuals have also become obsolete and are ethically reproachable: based on charity and beneficence, goodwill and paternalism, if not on ignorance and vulnerability
This article engages with debates concerning the moral worth of human beings with profound intellect...
Background: In keeping with worldwide demographic changes and an ageing population, people with int...
Over the past several decades, disability rights have emerged as a growing concern within American s...
My dissertation addresses the question of how we ought to care for and engage with people with cogni...
Carers for people with intellectual disabilities in the UK are obliged to drive bad intimacy out of ...
Intellectual disability is often overlooked within mainstream disability studies and theories develo...
This study seeks to explain the importance of the ethics of care in making society just and equal. I...
Questions regarding dignity and moral worth of children and adults with profound intellectual disabi...
This article investigates the following question: How do disabled people and the response of Christi...
NoThis pioneering book, in considering intellectually disabled people's lives, sets out a care ethic...
Dementia is a syndrome characterised by cognitive decline, memory loss and progressive functional im...
This paper presents some of the ethical challenges facing services supporting adults with learning d...
A growing body of knowledge highlights the negative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the health an...
How valuable can people with mental disabilities be to others? In this article I present ethnographi...
In this article, we analyze the principles and values that guide the professional exercise when the ...
This article engages with debates concerning the moral worth of human beings with profound intellect...
Background: In keeping with worldwide demographic changes and an ageing population, people with int...
Over the past several decades, disability rights have emerged as a growing concern within American s...
My dissertation addresses the question of how we ought to care for and engage with people with cogni...
Carers for people with intellectual disabilities in the UK are obliged to drive bad intimacy out of ...
Intellectual disability is often overlooked within mainstream disability studies and theories develo...
This study seeks to explain the importance of the ethics of care in making society just and equal. I...
Questions regarding dignity and moral worth of children and adults with profound intellectual disabi...
This article investigates the following question: How do disabled people and the response of Christi...
NoThis pioneering book, in considering intellectually disabled people's lives, sets out a care ethic...
Dementia is a syndrome characterised by cognitive decline, memory loss and progressive functional im...
This paper presents some of the ethical challenges facing services supporting adults with learning d...
A growing body of knowledge highlights the negative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the health an...
How valuable can people with mental disabilities be to others? In this article I present ethnographi...
In this article, we analyze the principles and values that guide the professional exercise when the ...
This article engages with debates concerning the moral worth of human beings with profound intellect...
Background: In keeping with worldwide demographic changes and an ageing population, people with int...
Over the past several decades, disability rights have emerged as a growing concern within American s...