2006
DOI: 10.18061/dsq.v26i2.693
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Self-Determination: The other side of the coin. Reflections on a central but ambiguous term of the German Disability Rights Movement

Abstract: Since its beginning, independent living has been a crucial demand of the German Disability Rights Movement. The call for independent living and the refusal of its opposite, heteronomy, is the focal point of its critique. Disabled people realized that the way in which disabled people are treated in terms of social policy and of personal care is a form of discrimination and not a natural outcome of their "fate". This insight enabled people with disabilities to claim independent living as a form of liberation. Th… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Dada explains how disabled people have to pay a high price to earn acknowledgement as being capable of doing something (Maskos and Siebert 2006). She talks about the competitive and hierarchical working environment in her school particularly the culture of 'teaching excellence' her department laid out for itself and how she had had to work hard to prove herself as an 'excellent teacher'.…”
Section: Credentialismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dada explains how disabled people have to pay a high price to earn acknowledgement as being capable of doing something (Maskos and Siebert 2006). She talks about the competitive and hierarchical working environment in her school particularly the culture of 'teaching excellence' her department laid out for itself and how she had had to work hard to prove herself as an 'excellent teacher'.…”
Section: Credentialismmentioning
confidence: 99%