Capitalism and the social oppression of people with impairments - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Capitalism and the social oppression of people with impairments

Description:

Capitalism and the social oppression of people with impairments Bob Williams-Findlay Disability Equality & Human Rights Trainer The Birth of the Disabled People s ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1432
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 50
Provided by: HRL7
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Capitalism and the social oppression of people with impairments


1
Capitalism and the social oppression of people
with impairments
  • Bob Williams-Findlay
  • Disability Equality
  • Human Rights Trainer

2
(No Transcript)
3
The Birth of the Disabled Peoples Movement
  • The late 1960s saw May 68, the rise of both the
    Civil Rights and Womens Movements
  • The Independent Living Movement grew out of the
    US Disability Rights Movement, which began in the
    early 1970s. The IL Movement works at replacing
    the special education and rehabilitation experts
    concepts of integration, normalization and
    rehabilitation with a new paradigm developed by
    disabled people themselves.

4
The Birth of the Disabled Peoples Movement
  • The Union of the Physically Impaired Against
    Segregation was founded in 1972 and disbanded in
    1990. It nevertheless lay the basis for the UK
    Movement
  • It was started by Paul Hunt when he wrote a
    letter to the Guardian inviting disabled people
    to join with him to form a group to tackle
    disability.

5
The Birth of the Disabled Peoples Movement
  • UPIAS became the first disability liberation
    group in the UK, and one of the first in the
    world, and certainly the most advanced in the
    world.
  • What it had to offer disabled people was an
    analysis of disability - fairly basic, but an
    analysis of disability in which they presented a
    new concept. They presented disability as a
    social relationship in which disabled people were
    oppressed. And in doing this they were
    overturning the concept of disability as
    basically a biologically determined condition.

6
Over the years many disabled people
have campaigned for justice, equal rights and
an end to discrimination.
7
What is meant by Disability?
  • The 1970s saw some disabled people question why
    they were placed in special places and viewed
    as burdens on society
  • They argued that the way people viewed
    disability had led to the exclusion and
    segregation of those with significant impairments.

8
What is meant by Disability?
  • Disabled activists and academics began to develop
    a historical materialist analysis of people with
    impairments social relationships within given
    societies.
  • Thus the meanings given to disability are
    historically specific.

9
Historical Background
  • Once upon a time disability was seen as an act
    of God a punishment for the parents or the
    persons sin in this or a former life.
  • Just prior to the Industrial Revolution the focus
    shifted from spiritual to physical well-being and
    this finally resulted in the development of a
    medical classification system under capitalism.

10
Historical Background
  • By the middle of the nineteenth century British
    society had felt the impact of the Industrial
    Revolution. The harsh realities it produced
    created economic and social upheavals which
    brought about, in turn, moral panics around the
    fear of illness, disease and depravity. Social
    reformers sought to replace chaos with control -
    contours around what was considered normal were
    drawn and those groups thought to be polluting
    society - outside normality - were withdrawn
    from the public gaze.

11
Historical Background
  • The increased usage of institutionalisation, the
    birth of the eugenics movement and the
    proliferation of charities contributed towards
    cleansing society of its mad and hapless
    cripples. Non-conformity was unacceptable and
    those people deemed incapable of keeping
    standards associated with normal activities -
    productive and reproductive - had to be taken
    care of in more senses than one.

12
Historical Background
  • The First World War cemented the view that
    disability was a personal tragedy based on
    the notion that the loss of bodily function also
    means a break with able-bodied normality
  • Hence, the less a person functions like a normal
    person, the more disabled they were adjudged
    to be

13
Models of Disability
  • Individual model (sometimes called the Medical
    Model) tends to view disability as either a
    personal tragedy or a failure to be normal
  • Social model sees disability as the negative
    outcome resulting from systems, structures and
    attitudes within society (i.e. disabling barriers)

14
Models of Disability
  • Individual Model of Disability legitimises how
    capitalist society socially constructs and
    creates disability.
  • Social construction around dominant ideologies
    such as individualism and normality
  • Social creation the systematic failure to
    address disabling barriers and institutional
    discrimination e.g. exploitative social relations
    in the labour market

15
Individual Model of Disability
Cant walk, talk, see, hear, work, climb
stairs, read written info, speak, etc.
Is passive or dependant confined to
a wheelchair, housebound, etc.
The Disabled Person
Is a burden needs care, help, services takes
and doesnt give
Is sick or ill waiting for a cure, confusion
between illness and disability
Object of pity or sorrow recipient of charity,
has special needs which dont get met by
mainstream services or funding, etc.
16
Disability as Tragedy
  • If a wheelchair user is unable to access a
    building because it has steps the reason is
    their inability to walk
  • If a Deaf person is unable to follow a
    conversation the reason is their inability to
    hear
  • If a person with learning difficulties gets lost
    the reason is their lack of ability to
    understand directions

17
Disability as Tragedy
  • The model sees disability as being the degree to
    which a person fails to conform to the expected
    and accepted norms linked to daily functional
    activities
  • Disability is located within the individual and
    therefore blames their impairment for any
    social disadvantage they encounter

18
Disability as Tragedy
  • Maintains that disability should be cured
    through medicine and treatment. But what are the
    implications of this approach if the persons
    situation cannot be altered this way?
  • Leads to actions to end the suffering or
    placing disabled people into special provisions
    due to their special needs

19
Disability as Tragedy
  • Individual model of disability maintains the view
    is that disabled people need to fit into society.
    It justifies a cycle of exclusion and dependency
    due to common attitudes and prejudices as well as
    inappropriate practices.

20
Consequences
  • Disabled people have faced segregation,
    isolation, invisibility discrimination
  • Location of the problem within the individual
    a person with a disability
  • Created institutional discrimination

21
Definitions
  • The ICIDH was replaced in 2001 by the
    International Classification on Functioning,
    Disability and Health (ICF) which, attempts to
    look at the impact of the environment, both
    physical and attitudinal, in disabling people
    living with impairments.

22
Social Model Definitions of Disability
  • Impairment an injury, illness or inherited
    condition that causes or likely to cause a loss
    or difference in the way the body and mind works.
  • Disability the loss or limitation of
    opportunities to take part in the general life of
    the community on an equal level with others due
    to physical and social barriers.

23
The Social Model of Disability
  • Within this model disability is seen as a
    socially created issue. An individual with an
    impairment will not be disabled by society, if
    their social environment acknowledges, removes or
    reduces the disabling barriers they encounter.
    This includes accepting their impairment and the
    social consequences of living with an impairment.

24
Social Model
  • The social model offers an alternative
    understanding of disability
  • Disability is viewed as the outcome of negative
    interactions that takes place between the
    impaired individual and their social environment
    each side, (the impairment / environment) has
    an influence on the interactions

25
Social Model
  • We refer to negative interactions as being the
    cause of disabling barriers at the micro level of
    society.
  • Disabling barriers can be
  • negative attitudes towards disabled people
  • policies, practices and customs
  • the natural or built environment

26
Social Model of Disability
Information not in accessible formats e.g. plain
language, Braille, tape, large print, disk,
accessible website, etc.
Inaccessible physical environments including
buildings, transport, poor design, etc.
The Disabling World
Communication barriers e.g. few sign
language Interpreters, no induction (hearing)
loops or alternatives to telephones, assuming
everyone communicates in the same way
Prejudice e.g. attitudes, stereotyping,
assumptions, etc.
Discrimination e.g. inflexible or unfair systems
in organisations
27
Social Model
  • If a wheelchair user is unable to access a
    building because it has steps the reason is the
    failure to provide a ramp or lift
  • If a Deaf person is unable to follow a
    conversation the reason is the
    non-consideration of their communication needs
  • If a person with learning difficulties gets lost
    the reason is the fact the directions they were
    given clearly didnt meet their needs

28
The Politics of Disability
  • The social model sees disability as being imposed
    on top of people who have impairments. Disability
    is viewed as the oppressive social relationships
    people with impairments experience. People with
    impairments are disabled by the structures,
    attitudes and culture found in specific
    societies.

29
The Politics of Disability
  • Therefore
  • For me disabled people are defined in terms of
    three criteria
  • (i) they have an impairment
  • (ii) they experience oppression as a
  • consequence and
  • (iii) they identify themselves as a disabled
  • person.

30
The Politics of Disability
  • Using the generic term does not mean that I do
    not recognise differences in experience within
    the group but that in exploring this we should
    start from the ways oppression differentially
    impacts on different groups of people rather than
    with differences in experience among individuals
    with different impairments.
  • Mike Oliver from Capitalism, disability and
    ideology A materialist critique
  • of the Normalization principle (1999)

31
  • Disability Terminology
  • The term people with disabilities generally
  • refers to people with impairments who are
  • viewed as having the inability to perform
  • normal tasks (sic). It is an oppressive social
  • construct.
  • Disabled people are seen as people with
  • characteristics or impairments that lead to them
  • being disabled by the way society is organised.
    It
  • is political identity for the Disabled Peoples
  • Movement.

32
The Politics of Disability
  • Through the British Council of Disabled People
  • (BCODP) and the Independent Living
  • Movement the self-organisation of disabled people
  • gathered pace during the 1980s.
  • It was the same year as a Rights Not Charity
  • march took place. Private Members Bills
  • seeking legislation came and went. Research
  • commissioned by BCODP on the nature of
  • discrimination in Britain and acted as a turning
    point.

33
(No Transcript)
34
The Politics of Disability
  • Both MPs and the public began to take more
  • notice and in 1992 a new umbrella
  • organisation, Rights Now was established to
  • promote a Civil Rights bill. The outrage at
  • the first defeat of this bill, forced the
  • Government to produce its own legislation
  • which became the Disability Discrimination
  • Act 1995.

35
(No Transcript)
36
The Politics of Disability
  • The passing of the DDA did lead to a
  • surge in awareness about disability
  • discrimination among those who came
  • to know about the Acts existence,
  • however, the nature of the Act itself
  • made it unlikely to impact on the
  • structures of society where institutional
  • discrimination takes place.

37
The Politics of Disability
  • Demos reported
  • ....despite all the apparent progress that
    has been made since the original BCODP report was
    launched, the underlying reality is that disabled
    people continue to face the same barriers that
    they have always faced and that disablism
    remains rife throughout Britain.

38
The Politics of Disability
  • The Labour Party under Smith were
  • listening to disabled people and agreed
  • to bring in new social model based
  • legislation when elected. This changed
  • under Blair
  • Token changes tinkered with DDA
  • Ignored disabled peoples groups
  • Launched witch hunt against disabled people on
    benefits via Purnell and Freud

39
The Politics of Disability
  • I would argue New Labour helped to demobilize the
    Disabled Peoples Movement a social movement.
  • The Movement became fractured, de-politicized and
    isolated not too unlike the Left!

40
The Politics of Disability
  • Many of the policies adopted by the
  • CONDEM Government originate with New
  • Labour Freud, an ex-merchant banker,
  • swapping sides to become a Lord and
  • lead the attack. The attack is simply
  • starker and more hard hitting than
  • Labour planned. It is about restructuring
  • the State not the myth of UK Debt.

41
(No Transcript)
42
The Cuts and Disabled People
  • Using Tory press to stigmatise disabled people in
    a style similar to the Nazis
  • Forcing disabled people who are also ill to enter
    a labour market that discriminates against them
    suicides have already occurred.
  • The cuts in social care and the
  • restructuring of NHS will leave many at
  • risk.

43
(No Transcript)
44
The Cuts and Disabled People
  • The welfare reform will remove a quarter of
    disabled claimants out of benefits altogether and
    make it harder to claim.
  • Will individualise and medicalise the assessment
    process ESA, PIP, etc
  • Housing Benefit and ILF changes will lead to
    institutional rather than independent living

45
(No Transcript)
46
The Cuts and Disabled People
  • CONDEM cuts attack disabled peoples human rights
    and violate UN Convention on Rights of Disabled
    Persons
  • Disabled People Against Cuts is the radical voice
    of disabled people from within the old Disabled
    Peoples Movement

47
(No Transcript)
48
Talking about the Left
  • The Lefts understanding of the politics of
    disability is extremely poor
  • Ernest Mandel one of the few non-disabled
    Marxists to even engage with the issue
  • Many of the Lefts theories, policies and
    practices exclude disabled people and are
    therefore, albeit unintentionally, colluding in
    the social oppression of disabled people

49
  • Disabled people are part of the anti-capitalist
    struggle
  • Nothing About Us, Without Us!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com