Disability Sources for your Essay

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


Their stories provide a point of entrance to their lives through the reader's imagination; 2) to give one the ability of making non-concrete claims more concrete by anchoring them in tangible and real experiences; 3) they help to counter the problem of the vanishing individual where scholars and theorists over generalize so that the loose sight of the human aspect of what they are dealing with; 4) they form a link between the disabled individual and the community by allowing access to people's lives; and lastly 5) they help counteract an over determined view of reality. This is caused by theories that subject the world to behave by the rules of rationality and structured order when in reality the world is nothing like this (Booth 1996: 240)

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


Problems may come in the form of acquiring education, probability of entering a worthwhile profession, network of friends etc. The argument, however, is not valid because a mere acceptance of the argument implies the recognition of the degree to which we are at a drawback and also are the victim of the tyrannical behaviour of the social environment (Brisenden 1986:176) Therefore the main focus of the social model is the tyrannical aspects of the economic, social and political environment in which the disable dwell and does not put emphasis on the betterment of the disabled people

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


An emphasis was placed on the partnership and coordination of services following The Community Care Act 1990. This was increasingly exemplified and indeed highlighted and drawn to attention by 'Care Programmed Approach' (CPA: Department of Health 1990a as cited in Kemshall, 2009), and practice guidance for care management (Department of Health 1991e as cited in Kemshall, 2009)

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


An emphasis was placed on the partnership and coordination of services following The Community Care Act 1990. This was increasingly exemplified and indeed highlighted and drawn to attention by 'Care Programmed Approach' (CPA: Department of Health 1990a as cited in Kemshall, 2009), and practice guidance for care management (Department of Health 1991e as cited in Kemshall, 2009)

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


An emphasis was placed on the partnership and coordination of services following The Community Care Act 1990. This was increasingly exemplified and indeed highlighted and drawn to attention by 'Care Programmed Approach' (CPA: Department of Health 1990a as cited in Kemshall, 2009), and practice guidance for care management (Department of Health 1991e as cited in Kemshall, 2009)

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


An emphasis was placed on the partnership and coordination of services following The Community Care Act 1990. This was increasingly exemplified and indeed highlighted and drawn to attention by 'Care Programmed Approach' (CPA: Department of Health 1990a as cited in Kemshall, 2009), and practice guidance for care management (Department of Health 1991e as cited in Kemshall, 2009)

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


An emphasis was placed on the partnership and coordination of services following The Community Care Act 1990. This was increasingly exemplified and indeed highlighted and drawn to attention by 'Care Programmed Approach' (CPA: Department of Health 1990a as cited in Kemshall, 2009), and practice guidance for care management (Department of Health 1991e as cited in Kemshall, 2009)

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


This in effect reduces the tendency of psychological health services to lean towards the medical side. This in turn increases the focus on individual rights, social needs, and support services (Fennell 1999 as cited in Kemshall, 2009)

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


The effort to sustain such an agnostic position has fragmented, particularly as the embodied differences among and between disabled people have become manifest in new social and political aspirations. Bodies matter, most importantly, in our somatic society (Turner 1996, 1) because they no longer function 'outside the internally referential systems of modernity' but have become themselves 'reflexively mobilized' (Giddens 1991, 8)

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


Bodies matter, most importantly, in our somatic society (Turner 1996, 1) because they no longer function 'outside the internally referential systems of modernity' but have become themselves 'reflexively mobilized' (Giddens 1991, 8). The body became an ineligible subject in social model discourse because the medical model was impairment driven and, thus, represented the terrain of the oppressor" (Hughes, 2009)

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


These norms are problematic and cannot be altered easily since it is rarely ever that those who are disabled have enough power to control these norms also. The disabled may respond to these limitations put on them either by quietly agreeing to them and adopting whatever role that is given to them by the society or if they completely refuse to accept them they may have to bear the consequence for their 'pathogenic' behaviour (Kemshall, 2009)

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


The value base of disability studies In "an audit of where we are now" Oliver highlights and presents a few different concerns that have come to light. These include the idea that "disability" is a notion of domination like racial discrimination and sexism (Abberley 1987) as well as the acquisitive notion of disability (Oliver

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


But that is no measure of its importance or indeed its effect on the programs under its development. Case management focused on the analyses of assessment methods in community care (Onyett 1992)

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


Assertive outreach (Ryan 1999 as cited in Kemshall, 2009; Ryan et al. 1999 as cited in Kemshall, 2009); RAMAS, also known as 'risk assessment, management and audit systems' (O'Rourke and Hammond 2000 as cited in Kemshall, 2009)

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


The sub-fields of psychiatry and psychology took over much of the work which was previously conducted at these so called institutions. The state began to lose control to professionals and other officials (Rose 1985, 1986a)

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


The sub-fields of psychiatry and psychology took over much of the work which was previously conducted at these so called institutions. The state began to lose control to professionals and other officials (Rose 1985, 1986a)

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


This was increasingly exemplified and indeed highlighted and drawn to attention by 'Care Programmed Approach' (CPA: Department of Health 1990a as cited in Kemshall, 2009), and practice guidance for care management (Department of Health 1991e as cited in Kemshall, 2009). Care management and its forerunner case management were seen and were thought to be absolutely compulsory for meeting client needs and amalgamating different and separate sources in to one single untied and singular care package (Ryan et al

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


This was increasingly exemplified and indeed highlighted and drawn to attention by 'Care Programmed Approach' (CPA: Department of Health 1990a as cited in Kemshall, 2009), and practice guidance for care management (Department of Health 1991e as cited in Kemshall, 2009). Care management and its forerunner case management were seen and were thought to be absolutely compulsory for meeting client needs and amalgamating different and separate sources in to one single untied and singular care package (Ryan et al

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


Its power waned and it began to realize that cooperative process was needed in place of the traditional and typical repressive process previously used Carpenter (2000: 605). Speaking in terms of fiscal gain and loss community-based care is a cheap alternative to the management of the "labour market casualties" (Scull 1979, 1993 as cited in Kemshall, 2009)

Disability and Society in Scotland UK


Its power waned and it began to realize that cooperative process was needed in place of the traditional and typical repressive process previously used Carpenter (2000: 605). Speaking in terms of fiscal gain and loss community-based care is a cheap alternative to the management of the "labour market casualties" (Scull 1979, 1993 as cited in Kemshall, 2009)