The Government of Disability: economics and power in welfare and work |
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Authors: | Debbie Jolly |
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Affiliation: | a The Centre for Disability Studies, Department of Sociology and Social Policy, Leeds University, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK. |
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Abstract: | The term government of disability refers to the ways that the lived experiences of people with accredited impairments are contextualised by economics and power in welfare and work. This paper explores how far a multiple perspective that develops a framework of the government of disability and the ontological ambiguity of impairment can take us towards contemporary understandings of disability, impairment and change in the UK.
The term the ontological ambiguity of impairment describes the ways that understandings of impairment have become more ambiguous, contributing to greater insecurities and fragmentation because of key changes in the government of disability. However, I argue that wider explanations of economic and power relationships are also necessary to develop a critical perspective of the contemporary government of disability, economics, and power in welfare and work. |
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