TY - JOUR
T1 - Understanding Care from the View of Individuals with Cerebral Palsy
T2 - Pity, Politics, and Pride
AU - Dahl, Olivia
AU - Dammeyer, Jesper
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Throughout history, disability has been understood in different ways: as a curse, a biomedical condition, a societal/political problem, a minority identity, and a social and cultural construction. Disability understandings reflect society’s legislation and the character of social support for people with disability and vice versa. In this article, qualitative interviews with adults with cerebral palsy were analyzed with a focus on how care, as a fundamental need between people, might be mediated by implicit and explicit understandings of disability. The central focus lies in how historical paradigms of disability and caregiving are reflected in the lived experiences of adults with cerebral palsy. The findings were overall twofold. First, contemporary disability understandings do not substitute former understandings but coexist as superimposed practices of care. Second, new perspectives of disability and care emerged emphasizing equitable relationships, empowerment, and solidarity. It is discussed how premodern, modern, late modern, and postmodern understandings of disability shape the nature of care directed at people with disability in a Western welfare context and how practices of care can contribute to the advancement of social justice.
AB - Throughout history, disability has been understood in different ways: as a curse, a biomedical condition, a societal/political problem, a minority identity, and a social and cultural construction. Disability understandings reflect society’s legislation and the character of social support for people with disability and vice versa. In this article, qualitative interviews with adults with cerebral palsy were analyzed with a focus on how care, as a fundamental need between people, might be mediated by implicit and explicit understandings of disability. The central focus lies in how historical paradigms of disability and caregiving are reflected in the lived experiences of adults with cerebral palsy. The findings were overall twofold. First, contemporary disability understandings do not substitute former understandings but coexist as superimposed practices of care. Second, new perspectives of disability and care emerged emphasizing equitable relationships, empowerment, and solidarity. It is discussed how premodern, modern, late modern, and postmodern understandings of disability shape the nature of care directed at people with disability in a Western welfare context and how practices of care can contribute to the advancement of social justice.
U2 - 10.1155/2024/5574535
DO - 10.1155/2024/5574535
M3 - Tidsskriftartikel
VL - 2024
JO - Health and Social Care in the Community
JF - Health and Social Care in the Community
SN - 0966-0410
M1 - 5574535
ER -