RemNote Community
Community

Introduction to Disability Studies

Understand the social versus medical models of disability, key concepts like accessibility and ableism, and how interdisciplinary insights shape inclusive policies and design.
Summary
Read Summary
Flashcards
Save Flashcards
Quiz
Take Quiz

Quick Practice

How does Disability Studies view disability compared to a traditional medical perspective?
1 of 21

Summary

Foundations of Disability Studies Introduction Disability Studies is an interdisciplinary academic field that fundamentally shifts how we think about disability. Rather than viewing disability as a personal medical tragedy, Disability Studies examines disability as a social, cultural, and political phenomenon. This shift in perspective is recent but profound. The field emerged from disability activism during the 1960s and 1970s civil-rights movements, when disabled people themselves demanded equal rights, accessibility, and self-determination. Today, scholars in Disability Studies draw on sociology, anthropology, ethics, public policy, architecture, and cultural studies to understand disability and transform how society includes disabled people. What makes Disability Studies distinctive is its commitment to centering the perspectives and lived experiences of disabled people themselves. This is not a field where disabled people are only subjects of study—they are also scholars, theorists, and leaders shaping the field's direction. The Medical Model versus the Social Model: A Foundational Divide At the heart of Disability Studies lies a critical debate about what disability actually is. Understanding this debate is essential to understanding the entire field. The Medical Model The medical model treats disability as an individual medical problem—something wrong with a person's body or mind that should be fixed or cured. Under this view, a person who uses a wheelchair has a "problem" that physicians should solve. The focus is on the disabled individual's body and what needs to be changed about it. This model has dominated Western thinking for much of modern history and continues to shape how many people understand disability. The Social Model The social model offers a radically different perspective. Rather than locating the problem within the individual, the social model argues that disability results from the interaction between a person's body or mind and a society that is not designed with them in mind. A person using a wheelchair is not "disabled" by their body—they are disabled by inaccessible buildings, lack of ramps and elevators, inflexible work practices that require everyone to work in the same way, and social stigma that devalues them. This distinction is profound. Consider a concrete example: A deaf person might attend a meeting with no interpreter. The medical model would say the deaf person has a "hearing problem" that prevents them from participating. The social model says the organization failed to provide an interpreter—the problem is an inaccessible environment, not the individual. The social model shifts responsibility. Instead of asking "How do we fix this disabled person?", we ask "How do we design our buildings, policies, and practices so everyone can participate?" The Contemporary "Social-Model-in-Practice" Perspective Most Disability Studies scholars today adopt what's called a social-model-in-practice stance. This perspective acknowledges that impairments—medical conditions or differences in how bodies and minds work—do exist. Having diabetes or chronic pain or cerebral palsy is a real experience with real effects. However, the social-model-in-practice approach emphasizes that most barriers are structural (physical features of the environment) and attitudinal (how people think and feel about disability). This means that most of the disadvantage disabled people face comes from an inaccessible world, not from their bodies. This perspective matters practically because it guides where we focus our efforts. Research, policy, and design all flow from understanding disability this way—we remove external obstacles, make spaces and systems accessible, and change how society thinks about disability. Key Concepts in Disability Studies Understanding Disability Studies requires grasping several key conceptual terms that shape how scholars and practitioners think about disability. Accessibility Accessibility refers to the design of products, environments, and services so that all people can use them effectively. This goes far beyond what many people assume. Accessibility includes: Physical accessibility: ramps, elevators, accessible parking, bathrooms with grab bars Digital accessibility: websites that work with screen readers, captions on videos, keyboard navigation Communication accessibility: interpreters, large-print materials, plain-language explanations Many countries have legal standards requiring accessibility. For example, the United States requires accessibility in buildings and digital spaces. But accessibility is not simply about compliance with rules—it reflects a commitment to inclusion. Inclusion Inclusion means full participation of disabled individuals in social, educational, and workplace settings. This is more ambitious than accessibility alone. A building might be physically accessible (accessible ramps exist), but if staff are hostile to disabled people, the environment is not truly inclusive. Inclusion means valuing diverse ways of being and removing both barriers and attitudes that prevent people from participating fully. Ableism Ableism is the bias that privileges "abled" (non-disabled) ways of being and marginalizes disabled bodies and minds. Just as racism privileges white people and sexism privileges men, ableism privileges those without disabilities. Ableism manifests in language (people saying "that's so lame" to mean stupid), in policies (job requirements that exclude disabled people), and in everyday interactions (people speaking loudly and slowly to blind people as if blindness affects hearing). One tricky aspect of ableism is that it can be internalized. Many disabled people grow up absorbing ableist messages and come to devalue themselves. Disability Studies scholarship helps people recognize and resist these messages. Intersectionality Intersectionality examines how disability intersects with other aspects of identity—particularly race, gender, class, sexuality, and immigration status. A disabled Black woman experiences disability differently than a disabled white woman because racism compounds disability discrimination. A disabled immigrant may face barriers around both disability access and immigration status. Intersectionality insists that we cannot understand disability without understanding how it overlaps with other forms of identity and oppression. This is important because mainstream disability advocacy sometimes centers white, middle-class disabled people while marginalizing disabled people of color and poor disabled people. Rights-Based Approaches Rights-based approaches frame disability as a human-rights issue rather than a charity concern. This reframes the entire conversation. Rather than asking "What charity can we give to poor disabled people?", rights-based approaches demand that governments protect the legal rights of disabled people as a matter of justice. These approaches call for legal protections against discrimination, equal opportunity to education and employment, and state responsibility to ensure access. Disciplines That Shape Disability Studies Disability Studies brings together scholars from many fields, each contributing distinctive insights. Sociology studies how social structures create and maintain disability barriers. Sociologists examine how schools, workplaces, and neighborhoods either exclude or include disabled people, and how policies shape disabled people's life chances. Anthropology explores the cultural meanings of disability across different societies. Anthropologists have shown that disability is not experienced the same way everywhere—some cultures value forms of deafness differently than others, and some disabilities carry different social meanings in different places. Ethics analyzes moral obligations regarding disability—what do we owe to disabled people? What makes a society just in how it treats disabled people? These philosophical questions ground practical discussions about policy and design. Public policy experts design laws and programs that promote equity for disabled people. They translate principles into practice. Architects and designers examine how built environments enable or restrict access. They apply universal design principles—the idea that spaces should be designed from the start to be usable by the widest range of people, including disabled people. This is more effective than retrofitting accessibility later. Language and Representation How we speak about disability shapes how people think about and treat disabled people. This is why language matters in Disability Studies. Terminology and Identity Different terminology choices reflect different values. Some debates center on person-first language ("person with a disability") versus identity-first language ("disabled person"). Person-first language emphasizes the individual before the disability—it aims to show that disability is one characteristic among many. However, many disabled people prefer identity-first language because they view disability as a fundamental part of who they are, not something separate from themselves. Many Deaf people, for example, proudly identify as Deaf (with a capital D) rather than as "people with hearing loss"—Deaf identity includes language and culture, not just a medical condition. There is no single "correct" approach, and different disabled people have different preferences. The respectful approach is to use the language that disabled people themselves prefer. The Power of Representation How disability is depicted in media, literature, and public spaces shapes public attitudes. Stereotypical portrayals—disabled people as tragic victims or as inspiration simply for living—limit how society sees disabled people. Authentic representation of disabled people's actual lives, by disabled creators, helps society understand disability more accurately. Technology and Assistive Devices Assistive technology includes devices and software that enhance functional independence. Examples range from wheelchairs to cochlear implants to screen-reading software to simple tools like grabber sticks or adapted utensils. Technological advancement can reduce barriers significantly. A blind person using screen-reader software can access written information just as a sighted person can. A deaf person using video relay services can make phone calls. However, technology is not a solution to disability on its own—it must pair with accessible design and inclusive attitudes. A highly advanced wheelchair is useless in a building with no ramps. Legal and Policy Milestones Disability rights have been secured through pivotal legislation and international agreements that establish legal protections and frameworks for inclusion. The Americans with Disabilities Act (1990) The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) is landmark U.S. legislation that prohibits discrimination against disabled people in employment, public services, and accommodations. The ADA establishes standards for physical and communication accessibility, requires employers to provide reasonable accommodations to qualified disabled workers, and requires public institutions to provide equal access to services. The ADA is significant both for what it accomplished and for how it reflected changing thinking. Its passage showed that disability was increasingly understood as a civil-rights issue, not merely a medical or charitable concern. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (2006) The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities is an international agreement that obliges signatory nations to protect the civil, political, economic, and social rights of disabled persons. It promotes inclusive education, accessible health care, and full participation in society. Unlike the ADA, which focuses on discrimination and access, the UN Convention articulates positive rights—not just the right to avoid discrimination, but the right to education, employment, and participation. <extrainfo> The UN Convention includes a significant shift in language: it explicitly states that disabled people should have choice and control over their lives ("nothing about us without us"), reflecting the priority that Disability Studies places on disabled people's voices and agency. </extrainfo> Rights-Based Policy Frameworks These legal developments reflect a broader shift toward rights-based frameworks that treat disability access as a matter of justice and legal obligation, not charity. These frameworks require governments to adopt policies ensuring equal access and non-discrimination across all sectors of society. Applying Disability Studies: From Principles to Practice Understanding Disability Studies concepts matters because they guide concrete changes in how we design spaces, create policies, and interact with disabled people. Designing Inclusive Environments Inclusive design is a practical process that evaluates user needs, removes physical barriers, and incorporates adaptable features. Rather than designing for an "average" person and adding accessibility features later, inclusive designers ask from the start: "How can we create spaces that work for the widest range of people?" Universal design principles guide this process. For example, a building entrance with both stairs and a ramp is more universally accessible than one with stairs alone—and the ramp helps not only wheelchair users, but parents with strollers and elderly people with walkers. Captions on videos help deaf people, but also help people learning English and people watching in noisy environments. Good inclusive design often benefits everyone, not just disabled people. Developing Inclusive Policies Inclusive policies must address education (ensuring disabled students learn alongside non-disabled peers, with needed supports), employment (hiring disabled workers and providing accommodations), transportation (making buses and trains accessible), and health care (providing interpreters for deaf patients, accessible examination equipment for people with mobility disabilities). This requires rethinking systems. A school committed to inclusion doesn't ask "Should we let this disabled child attend?"; it asks "What supports and changes do we need to make so this child thrives here?" Cultivating an Inclusive Mindset Finally, and fundamentally, Disability Studies emphasizes the importance of mindset. An inclusive mindset recognizes the value of diverse bodies and ways of living. It questions assumptions about what is "normal" or "optimal." Education about ableism and reflection on how we've internalized it foster empathy and help non-disabled people become active allies in creating inclusive spaces. This is ongoing work. Ableism is deeply embedded in how societies are organized, so creating truly inclusive spaces requires sustained effort and commitment to learning from disabled people.
Flashcards
How does Disability Studies view disability compared to a traditional medical perspective?
As a social, cultural, and political phenomenon rather than solely a medical problem.
During which historical period did disability activism emerge?
The 1960s and 1970s civil-rights movements.
How does the medical model treat disability?
As an individual defect that must be fixed or cured.
What is the primary cause of disability according to the social model?
The interaction between bodies and an inaccessible environment.
How does the social-model-in-practice stance differ from the pure social model?
It recognizes some medical aspects of impairment while maintaining the social focus.
What two types of barriers does the social-model-in-practice perspective emphasize?
Structural (physical) barriers Attitudinal (social) barriers
What does accessibility refer to in terms of design?
Designing products, environments, and services that can be used by all people.
In which three areas do legal standards often require accessibility?
Physical Digital Communication
What is the definition of inclusion for disabled individuals?
Full participation in social, educational, and workplace settings.
How is ableism defined in Disability Studies?
A bias that privileges "abled" ways of being and marginalizes disabled bodies and minds.
What does intersectionality examine in the context of disability?
How disability intersects with race, gender, class, and sexuality.
How do rights-based approaches frame disability differently than traditional views?
As a human-rights issue rather than a charity concern.
What three things do rights-based approaches demand from society and the state?
Legal protections Equal opportunity State responsibility
What is the focus of sociology within Disability Studies?
How social structures create and maintain disability barriers.
What is the focus of anthropology within Disability Studies?
Exploring cultural meanings of disability across societies.
What is the focus of ethics within Disability Studies?
Analyzing moral obligations to accommodate and respect disabled persons.
What is the primary goal of universal design principles?
To create spaces usable by the widest range of people.
What does person-first language emphasize when referring to disability?
The individual before the disability.
What rights are signatory nations obliged to protect under the 2006 UN Convention?
Civil rights Political rights Economic rights Social rights
What three actions are involved in the process of inclusive design?
Evaluating user needs Removing physical barriers Incorporating adaptable features
What does an inclusive mindset recognize about different bodies?
The value of diverse bodies and ways of living.

Quiz

What does the term “accessibility” refer to in Disability Studies?
1 of 19
Key Concepts
Disability Frameworks
Disability Studies
Social model of disability
Medical model of disability
Ableism
Intersectionality (disability)
Accessibility and Inclusion
Accessibility
Inclusion
Americans with Disabilities Act
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
Universal design