ABSTRACT

Geographies of disability have become a key research priority for many disability scholars and geographers. This edited collection, incorporating the work of leading international disability researchers, seeks to expand the current geographical frame operating within the realm of disability. Providing a critical and comprehensive examination of disability and spatial processes of exclusion and inclusion for disabled people, the book uniquely brings together insights from disability studies, spatial geographies and social policy with the purpose of exploring how spatial factors shape, limit or enhance policy towards, and the experiences of, disabled people.

Divided into two parts, the first section explores the key concepts to have emerged within the field of disability geographies, and their relationship to new policy regimes. New and emerging concepts within the field are critically explored for their significance in conceptually framing disability. The second section provides an in-depth examination of disabled people’s experience of changing landscapes within the onset of emerging disability policy regimes. It deals with how the various actors and stakeholders, such as governments, social care agencies, families and disabled people traverse these landscapes under the new conditions laid out by changing policy regimes. Crucially, the chapters examine the lived meaning of changing spatial relations for disabled people.

Grounded in recent empirical research, and with a global focus, each of the chapters reveal how social policy domains are challenged or undermined by the spatial realities faced by disabled people, and expands existing understandings of disability. In turn, the book supports readers to grasp future policy directions and processes that enable disabled people's choices, rights and participation. This important work will be invaluable reading for students and researchers involved in disability, geography and social policy.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction: disability, space, place and policy

New concepts, new ideas, new realities

part I|85 pages

Conceptualising disability

chapter 1|18 pages

Space, place and policy regimes

The changing contours of disability and citizenship

chapter 2|17 pages

Emplacing disabled bodies/minds in criminal law

Regulating sex and sexual consent in Ireland's Criminal Law (Sexual Offences) Act 1993

chapter 3|16 pages

The spaces of poverty

Renegotiating place and disability in the global South

chapter 4|16 pages

Accessible public space for the ‘not obviously disabled'

Jeopardised selfhood in an era of welfare retraction

chapter 5|16 pages

Temporalities and spaces of disability social (in)security

Australia and the UK compared

part II|81 pages

Experiencing disability, experiencing space and place

chapter 6|16 pages

Part of the problem or part of the solution?

How far do ‘reasonable adjustments' guarantee ‘inclusive access for disabled customers’?

chapter 7|15 pages

Biographies of place

Challenging official spatial constructions of sickness and disability

chapter 10|15 pages

Eroding the collective ‘places' of support

Emerging geographies of personalisation for people with intellectual disabilities