8 research outputs found
Disability Policies in France: Changes and Tensions between the Category-based, Universalist and Personalized Approaches
In this article, the authors show that the current French disability policy is traversed by conflicts between three different approaches to disability which came about at different periods in history. They begin by looking at the origins of disability policy in France. This policy was developed during the 20th century, from notions of repair, indemnification and compensation through rehabilitation. It became institutionalized in 1975, when two laws were passed, giving it the form of a category-based policy. Between 1970 and 2000, affected by the international situation, this policy came into conflict with a universalist policy. More recently there has been a desire to develop a personalized approach. Finally, the authors use two examples (taken from recent debates on the implementation in France of the new law of 11 February 2005) to show the tensions that have led to the coexistence of these three approaches within current disability policy
Disability Policies in France: Changes and Tensions between the Category-based, Universalist and Personalized Approaches
The Meanings of ‘Yes’ and ‘No’. An Explanation for the Forbid/Allow Asymmetry
question wording effect, question/answering process, nominal answering scales, interval scales, validity, reliability, survey research, questionnaire development, split–ballot design,
Personal assistance—direct payments or alternative public service. Does it matter for the promotion of user control?
Context Effects in Social and Psychological Research
http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/64020/1/Context_effects.pd