2002
DOI: 10.1177/00224669020360030301
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Trends and Issues in Serving Culturally Diverse Families of Children with Disabilities

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Cited by 128 publications
(143 citation statements)
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“…If the unemployment rate for an Indigenous community is around 50%, how does this impact on the right to 'meaningful work' of a disabled Indigenous person? For many Indigenous families, independence (especially for children) is seen as a cultural threat to the interdependence and cohesion of one's kin; a more valued ethic than the self-reliance on which much rehabilitation is predicated (for similar findings for minority communities in the USA, see Harry 2002;Devlieger, Albrecht, and Hertz 2007).…”
Section: Indigenous Meanings Of Disabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If the unemployment rate for an Indigenous community is around 50%, how does this impact on the right to 'meaningful work' of a disabled Indigenous person? For many Indigenous families, independence (especially for children) is seen as a cultural threat to the interdependence and cohesion of one's kin; a more valued ethic than the self-reliance on which much rehabilitation is predicated (for similar findings for minority communities in the USA, see Harry 2002;Devlieger, Albrecht, and Hertz 2007).…”
Section: Indigenous Meanings Of Disabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The second purpose for the study was to address the concept that parental culture and acculturation have been shown to strongly influence parental views of the education of their children with disabilities' and their perceptions of their own involvement in the special educational process (Harry, 2001). This study explored the perceptions and expectations of Haitian parents with regard to the education of their children with disabilities.…”
Section: Purpose Of the Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Por otro lado, tal como señala Ferguson (2002), las respuestas que tradicionalmente han dado los profesionales ante este acontecimiento se han caracterizado por asumir que la aparición de consecuencias trágicas es inherente a la discapacidad, hasta el punto de que los efectos negativos han eclipsado cualquier consideración positiva que pudiera hacerse. Como se puede apreciar, se trata de interpretaciones tremendamente negativas al aceptar a priori que el nacimiento de un niño con discapacidad es siempre un suceso trágico, que exige que los padres pasen por una etapa de duelo ante la pérdida del hijo ideal (Harry, 2002); la "trágica crisis" de ese nacimiento sólo se podría superar con la ayuda de una psicoterapia adecuada.…”
Section: Cuando Nació MI Hija Me Encontré Como… ¿Qué Hago? ¡Un Vacío unclassified