Questions of Competence

Culture, Classification and Intellectual Disability

Richard Jenkins editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:4th Feb '99

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Questions of Competence cover

This book offers a conceptualisation of intellectual disability emphasising its cultural variability and social construction.

This book advances a conceptualisation of intellectual disability that emphasises its cultural variability and social construction rather than its medicalised, physiological nature. Addressed to disability specialists in the social sciences and medicine, it treats intellectual disability not just as a property of individuals, but also as social phenomenon.Intellectual disability - ranging from what is more commonly described as 'mental retardation' to 'learning difficulties' - is a socially constructed phenomenon that varies in important respects cross-culturally. This collection of original essays examines the classification of people as competent and incompetent in the United States, England, Wales, Greece, Greenland, Uganda, and Belize. The contributors, anthropologists and sociologists, argue that it is time for a new understanding of intellectual disability. In contrast to medical and psychological models, a social model of intellectual disability emphasises the cultural and individual variability of incompetence, the intimate relationship between cultural categories of competence and incompetence, and the role of social interaction and networks in its social construction. This book Is an original contribution to ongoing theoretical and policy debates about disability.

ISBN: 9780521626620

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 15mm

Weight: 390g

262 pages