| The term "disability", as it is applied to humans, refers to any condition that
impedes the completion of daily tasks using traditional methods. National governments and global humanitarian agencies have narrowed
this definition for their own purposes, only pledging aid to those with specific disabilities of a certain severity.
Types of disability
"Disability" can be broken down into a number of broad sub-categories, which include the following:
The evolution of a movement
Historically, disabilities have often been cast in a negative light. An individual thus affected was seen as being a
“patient” subject either to cure or to ongoing medical care. His condition is seen as disabling; the social reactions
to it are justified, and the barriers unavoidable. This position is known as the medical model of disability.
Over the past 20 years, a competing view known as the social model of disability has come to the fore. In this model, disability is seen more as a
social construction than a medical reality. An individual may be impaired by a condition that requires daily living adaptations,
but the bulk of his problem - his disability - can be found in the attitudinal and physical barriers erected by society.
Both the medical and social models agree, to a point, that facilities and opportunities should be made as accessible as
possible to individuals who require adaptations. Dismantling physical barriers, or setting up adaptations such as wheelchair
ramps, is known as "fostering accessibility".
The language and terminology of disability
Lately, the term disability has replaced the older designation handicapped. While these two designations can be used interchangeably, proponents of the social model of
disability have appropriated the latter term to describe those social and economic consequences of the former. An individual with
a physical or intellectual disability, then, is said to be "handicapped" by the lowered expectations of society.
A person may also be "impaired" either by a correctable condition such as myopia, or
by an uncorrectable one such as cerebral palsy. For those with mild
conditions, related impairments disappear with the application of corrective devices. More serious impairments call for adaptive
equipment.
In the United Kingdom, people within the disability rights movement commonly use the term "Disabled" to denote someone who is "disabled
by society's inability to accommodate all of its inhabitants."
The Person First
Movement has added another layer to this discourse by asking that people with disabilities be identified first as
individuals. "Person First Language" -- referring, for example, to a “woman who is blind,” rather than to "a blind
woman" - is a form of political correctness designed to
further the aims of the social model by removing attitudinal barriers.
Some people with disabilities support the Person First Movement, while others do not. People who are Deaf in particular may see themselves as members of a specific community, properly called the Deaf culture, and so will reject efforts designed to distance them from the central
fact of their identity.
A human rights based approach has been adopted by many organizations of and for disabled people. In 2000, for example, the
United Nations Assembly decided to start working on a comprehensive convention for the rights of disabled people.
Well-known people with disabilities
Many people with disabilities have contributed to society. These include:
External links
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