12 research outputs found
Disabled childrenâs childhood studies: A distinct approach?
© 2014, © 2014 Taylor & Francis. This paper suggests that the emergence of disabled childrenâs childhood studies as an area of study offers a distinct approach to inquiry; it represents a significant shift away from the long-standing deficit discourses of disabled childhoods that have dominated western culture and its reaches. On the one hand, contemporary childhood studies contest normative, Eurocentric mantras around the âstandard childâ; while on the other, disability studies critique the medical discourses and the scope of its authority. However, while drawing on these two approaches, disabled childrenâs childhood studies provide more than this combined critique. In disabled childrenâs childhood studies, disabled children are not viewed as necessarily having problems or being problems, but as having childhoods
Embodied integrity, shaping surgeries, and the profoundly disabled child
This chapter seeks to develop our model of âembodied integrityâ by addressing its capacity to protect profoundly disabled children from irreversible non-therapeutic bodily interventions and to frame a more appropriate ethico-legal response to their care. Specifically, we suggest that the decision-making process in the controversial case of Ashley X, and much subsequent academic commentary, was impoverished and served to reify understandings of severely disabled children as frozen in a state of perpetual childhood and reducible to their bodies. In contrast, the conception of embodied integrity that we flesh out in this chapter takes account of these childrenâs corporeality while also recognising that they are entangled in institutional and familial contexts. Responding to evidence of a growing demand for growth attenuation and shaping surgeries we argue that our embodied understanding of integrity promotes the immediate and future interests of children, including those who are profoundly disabled