ABSTRACT

This innovative book discusses the meaning of 'inclusion' through the exploration of the interactions between disabled and non-disabled people at a community leisure centre. By exploring the nature of this interface, an understanding of how people create potential for both disability and inclusion is revealed. This book takes a very different approach to that of existing texts, which have tended to concentrate mainly on disabled people's exclusion. The advantage of this new approach is that it adds an extra dimension to our understanding of how discriminatory practice is variously perpetuated and challenged..

Constructions of Disability is valuable reading for all people who are working towards increased social inclusion for disabled people, including theorists and students of disability studies and learning difficulty, leisure management and disability service providers, and their families. Using a practical case study approach, it explores the impact that social interaction between disabled and non-disabled people can have increasing or decreasing disabled people's opportunities for inclusion. Examples of both inclusive and discriminatory practice are described in detail, and the positive and negative effects of these actions on the participants are demonstrated and discussed. This insightful book offers a wide range of practical suggestions for the future development of more inclusive theory, policy and practice.

chapter Chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 2|12 pages

Researching the interface

Theories on the construction of disability

chapter Chapter 3|13 pages

Greenways Leisure Centre

Issues, identities and impairment factors

chapter Chapter 4|16 pages

Being a researcher

chapter Chapter 5|11 pages

Being a consultant

chapter Chapter 6|9 pages

Being a member of staff

chapter Chapter 7|8 pages

Being a friend

chapter Chapter 8|7 pages

Being a woman

chapter Chapter 9|9 pages

Being white

chapter Chapter 10|12 pages

Being a body

chapter Chapter 11|16 pages

Being a disabled person

chapter Chapter 12|6 pages

Being an oppressor

chapter Chapter 13|10 pages

Being an activist

chapter Chapter 14|15 pages

Conclusions