Title: Disability Studies from an International Perspective
1Disability Studies from an International
Perspective
- Aldred H. Neufeldt
- Community Rehabilitation
- Disability Studies Program,
- University of Calgary
- Keynote Presentation
- Meeting of the Council on Rehabilitation
Educations (CORE) - Committee on Undergraduate Education (CUE)
- The University of Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee, 3
June 2005
2Purpose
- To look at the notion of disability studies
from a global level - Think about how different contexts influence
understandings of services for persons with
disabilities and role of personnel, including
the - Historical
- Cultural
- Structural
- Functional
- Think about implications for our business as
educators
3Disability Studies as an Area of Enquiry
- The notion of Disability Studies emerged as a
conceptual challenge to traditional ideas of
rehabilitation including educational programs - Arose in a particular place at a particular time
- in the USA/Canada in the aftermath of civil
rights campaigns - late 1970s/early 1980s - prompted by disability self-advocacy movement
(independent living movement) - as a challenge to professional ideologies and
models dominating the field - Note SDS founded (1982) as the Section for the
study of Chronic Illness, Impairment, and
Disability renamed, SDS in 1986 - linked to
Western Social Science Assoc. through Chronic
Disease and Disability Section
4While Disability Studies may be thought of as
a relatively new field of enquiry, the
Systematic Study of Disability has a long and
important History
- BUT, it is worthwhile remembering that
5Historical Reasons for Systematic Interest in
Impairment and Disability
- Survival
- Life of the ancients was nasty, brutish and
short (Hobbes). - Continued until post-WW II
- Social
- Inclusion into/contribution to community life (OT
writings, 12th Century Village of Gheel) - Intrinsic interest (writings of Herodotus and
others) - Knowledge pursuit
- Function of the senses (Alcmaeon of Croton - 5th
c. BCE) - Physiology of the body (Roman Era - set
fractures, surgery, etc.) - Interventions (18th C - schools 19th c. -
Braille, Itard, Seguin, others) - Professional
- Late 19th/20th Century
- Advocacy
- Late 20th C
6Systematic Study of Disability
7Recent History of Service distribution Canada
post-WWII
Â
Community  Presence High
Schools
Churches
Other
Â
Hospitals
Residential Institutions
Low High Community Participation
8Service distribution Canada today
Â
Community  Presence High
Local Service Agencies
Â
Local/Regional Health Human Service
Centres/Organizations
Residential Institutions
Low High Community Participation
9Service distribution Russia - today
Â
Community  Presence High
Schools
Dispensaries
Other
Â
Hospitals Specialized Centres
Residential Institutions
Low High Community Participation
10Service distribution Germany, France, Japan
today
Â
Community  Presence High
Service Agencies
Â
Physical Rehab, Voc Rehab, Sheltered Industries,
Hospitals
Residential Institutions
Low High Community Participation
11Culture Makes a Difference
- Example
- Tri-lateral Collaboration in development of CBR
Services in Republic of Srbska, BiH - Actors - RS/BiH, Canada, Japan
- Roles Host, funder of training, funder of
reconstruction and hardware - Challenge the little things
- who can decide that minutes accurately reflect a
meeting centralized vs. decentralized
responsiblity - Cultural differences in understanding what
constitutes an appropriate approach to monitoring
or evaluation
12Disability Studies a part of the Rights Talk
Revolution
- Growth in rights talk since 1950s
- - UN Charter of Human Rights, civil rights,
child, womens, disability, etc. - 2. At least 4 categories confused
- Moral, Legal, Civil, Human
- 3. Rights as a mantra gains and new
challenges for disability sector - s - democracies more inclusive,
- accommodating of different groups
formerly marginalized, - - greater equality
- - s - changed our politics
- - my rights vs. your rights
- - individualism
13Different Rights Cultures
- Britain
- Class-based, with centrist and individualist
features - France
- Strongly centralist
- USA
- Profoundly individualistic
- Canada
- Both strong belief in the common good, but also
import of individual and difference - Other OECD Countries
- mixture of understandings, legislation
14Different contexts lead to different views of
whats right
- Contexts involve a complex mixture of factors
including the - Historical
- Cultural
- Structural
- Functional
- Different contextual/ideological assumptions
sometimes lead to surprisingly similar
conclusions (e.g. materialist/Marxist views of
disability leaders in England lead to similar to
similar conclusion as civil rights power analysis
of American advocates strange bed fellows in
the global disability movement)
15Distribution of governance responsibilityInfluenc
es the Field
- Central (Nation-level)
- Sweden, Russia (Assumption that the State should
know) - France, Germany
- Britain
- USA (Assumption the individual knows what is
right, sue the State when individuals rights
seem abridged) - Provincial/State
- Canada (Mix of trust the State, cynicism)
- Belgium, Switzerland
- As do philosophical approaches to welfare state
commitments
16Approaches to welfare state policies
- Definition - the state assumes responsibility for
ensuring all its citizens have at least a minimum
income through various economic, employment
creation and income redistribution systems - Characteristic of OECD countries - but not of
others - Conservative/Corporatist Approaches
- Sweden - epitome of social democratic state
Strong belief that the state knows best - most
services delivered by government advocacy orgs
heavily subsidized by government - Germany France - also high commitment to state
knows best philosophybut, significant portion
of services provided by NGOs (virtually 100
subsidy, depending on nature of service) - a
conservative or corporatist approach designed
to support and accentuate the individuals
appropriate station in life.
17Approaches to welfare state policies (contd)
- Liberal Ideology
- Canada, Australia, Britain, US - liberal
countries - they are more anti-state and laissez-faire, with
emphasis on individual responsibility - heavier emphasis than the others on having
recipients of state support become earners of
their own income independent of government. - But, significant differences between then
- Canadas group rights emphasis - universal
health, employt insurance, etc. - compared to US
individual responsibility - Prescriptive vs. Permissive legislation (forced
compliance of US vs. suasive approaches in
Canada)
18Social institutions affecting disability services
Ecclesia
Invisible forces that shape assumptions and
beliefs
State
Community
Older Services
Emerging services
Household
Service user
19Examples of Functional Decisions that Make a
Difference
- Career education does it start in elementary
school as in much of Europe, or some time after
secondary education? - Funding of services the implications of
spiraling health care costs? - The roles of graduates of disability studies and
community practice programs - vs. those of medical rehabilitation, social work
and other professionals? - (Russian saying hold your friends close, and
your enemies even closer) - Role of end-users in decision-making?
20In thinking about Education, its important to
think of the relationship to
- Disability Studies research networks -
possibility of linking research virtually
GLADNET as example of Global Network - Career ladders that link college diploma to
Bachelor degree to Graduate degrees - Inter-disciplinary specializations within regular
degrees cross-training with Social Work or
Nursing or Medicine - The possibility of virtual linkages
Collaboration between Universities to address
specialization needs - The intersection of Knowledge-based Evidence with
Values-based evidence contextualized in our
Cultures
21Continually Interacting Sources of Evidence in
Shaping our Futures the V Heuristic
- Values Knowledge
- Beliefs Personal
- Experience
- Religious truths Organized
- Philosophies Observations
- Principles Theory generating
- Codes (enquiry) methods
- Laws Theory testing
- Regulations (inferential)
methods
22 Our business in this meeting is of interest
elsewhere
- European Bachelors degree programs meeting in
Norway (Austria, Ireland, Scotland, Norway) - Alberta 2010 Task Force need for
credentialing recognition - Others