Additional Information
Book Details
Abstract
Disabled people can be seen pejoratively as a homogenous group that are typically "weak" and "needy" and thus unable to undertake the rigours of professional care work. Shah also notes that disabled people are often wrongly assumed to have a high level of absences from work and to be thought generally less capable. Such discriminatory attitudes must be set aside. Disabled people are first and foremost people and will have a contribution to make to the professions, not least because of the invaluable problem solving skills they acquire in having to overcome everyday problems that many of us take for granted. Shah's book will hopefully provide inspiration for disabled professional staff, students and service users and show that equality and success are achievable for disabled people.'
- Journal of Interprofessional Care
'Practitioners working in many settings with people with dementia are likely to find this book presents new ideas but it would also be relevant to those working in rehabilitation services who do not, as yet, see people with dementia as key "clients".'
- Journal of Interprofessional Care
'They are actors, clerics, managers, journalists, financial advisors, instructors, athletes and developers of athletes, and educators. One is a member of parliament. Another is a dancer. Shah (sociology and social policy, Nottingham U.) interviewed 31 successful people with disabilities and found their influences, motivations, goals, and perceptions varied from individual to individual, and depended on family expectations, education, individual personalities, and career choices. She also found they differed in what they perceived to be success, how well their employers treated them, and how they handled failure. Shah's conclusions include the ideas that career development is important, that those who seek suitable role models and coping strategies, and that integration of schools should include everyone.'
- Book News
'By examining subjective factors like ambition (determination, response to disability and personal definitions of success) alongside objective measures (educational achievement, social status and financial success), Shah provides a useful framework for us to look at how all disabled people can be integrated into mainstream society… Instructive for anyone who works with disabled people in education, employment and society in general, this book is a through piece of social research.'
- Community Care
'This is a detailed and thought-provoking book that looks at the influences on, and the experiences of 31 successful disabled adults. It is the product of a PhD research project and the author herself is a disabled person… Career Success of Disabled High-Flyers should be used to inform educational and employment policy and practice. It provides role models for aspiring young people and other disabled adults and I recommend this book to teachers, guidance providers, employers and in fact anyone who is looking for an intelligent and well researched account of the experience of disabled people and factors relating to their success.'
- Newscheck
Career Success of Disabled High-Flyers challenges the assumption that disabled employees are a homogenous group and discusses important questions such as: What is disability? How do people with physical impairments define success? Does gender impact in the same way on disabled and non-disabled people's careers?
Drawing on in-depth case studies of thirty-one disabled adults who have been successful in their careers, this book suggests that individual traits and patterns of behaviour are key factors in career success, and shows that it is often society rather than impairment that hinders professional progression. Providing role models and valuable insights for young career-minded disabled people, it will also help inform policy and practice in education and training about disability and equality in schools, employment, and society in general.
This book is a must-read, not only for people with disabilities, but for teachers, policy-makers, employers and anyone with an interest in disabled people and career development.
`They are actors, clerics, managers, journalists, financial advisors, instructors, athletes and developers of athletes, and educators. One is a member of parliament. Another is a dancer. Shah (sociology and social policy, Nottingham U.) interviewed 31 successful people with disabilities and found their influences, motivations, goals, and perceptions varied from individual to individual, and depended on family expectations, education, individual personalities, and career choices. She also found they differed in what they perceived to be success, how well their employers treated them, and how they handled failure. Shah's conclusions include the ideas that career development is important, that those who seek suitable role models and coping strategies, and that integration of schools should include everyone'.
Book News
`Practitioners working in many settings with people with dementia are likely to find this book presents new ideas but it would also be relevant to those working in rehabilitation services who do not, as yet, see people with dementia as key 'clients'.'
Journal of Interprofessional Care, October 2006
`By examining subjective factors like ambition (determination, response to disability and personal definitions of success) alongside objective measures (educational achievement, social status and financial success), Shah provides a useful framework for us to look at how all disabled people can be integrated into mainstream society… Instructive for anyone who works with disabled people in education, employment and society in general, this book is a through piece of social research'
Community Care, 1-7 Sept 2005
`Disabled people can be seen pejoratively as a homogenous group that are typically 'weak' and 'needy' and thus unable to undertake the rigours of professional care work. Shah also notes that disabled people are often wrongly assumed to have a high level of absences from work and to be thought generally less capable. Such discriminatory attitudes must be set aside. Disabled people are first and foremost people and will have a contribution to make to the professions, not least because of the invaluable problem solving skills they acquire in having to overcome everyday problems that many of us take for granted. Shah's book will hopefully provide inspiration for disabled professional staff, students and service users and show that equality and success are achievable for disabled people.'
Journal of Interprofessional Care, October 2006
`This is a detailed and thought-provoking book that looks at the influences on, and the experiences of 31 successful disabled adults. It is the product of a PhD research project and the author herself is a disabled person… Career Success of Disabled High-Flyers should be used to inform educational and employment policy and practice. It provides role models for aspiring young people and other disabled adults and I recommend this book to teachers, guidance providers, employers and in fact anyone who is looking for an intelligent and well researched account of the experience of disabled people and factors relating to their success'.
Newscheck September 2005
Dr Sonali Shah is a postdoctoral research fellow in the School of Sociology and Social Policy at Nottingham University. Her research interests are connected with disabled childhoods and young people, special education versus inclusion, career choices and transitional development.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
INTRODUCTION 1 | |||
1 Terms and concepts 5 | |||
Technology and infrastructure 5 | |||
Technological development 12 | |||
Economic structural development factors 15 | |||
The technology transfer process 18 | |||
Technology transfer models 22 | |||
. . . and the reason why 25 | |||
2 The participants and their roles 27 | |||
Modes of participation 27 | |||
The national system 31 | |||
The international level 36 | |||
The consultant 42 | |||
The technology carrier 44 | |||
Gaps and linkages in the development process 47 | |||
3 Within the project framework - and beyond 52 | |||
Goal formulation and development 52 | |||
Project organization and execution 57 | |||
The significance of the project framework 62 | |||
The project in the development process 65 | |||
Gauges of results and effects 68 | |||
Resource allocation 71 | |||
Goal compliance between actors 72 | |||
4 Sri Lanka - mobilizing for coastal defence 75 | |||
Institutional context 76 | |||
LHI: History, concept and operation 77 | |||
Technology acquisition and implementation 81 | |||
Participants and linkages 84 | |||
Problems met and lessons learned 90 | |||
5 Thailand - mapping a turbulent development 94 | |||
Institutional context 96 | |||
Thailand Development Research Institute 98 | |||
TDRI as a technology carrier 106 | |||
Foundation and operation of TDRI 109 | |||
Problems met and lessons learned 113 | |||
6 Bangladesh - river management and flood control 116 | |||
Institutional context 117 | |||
The River Research Institute 119 | |||
The Surface Water Modelling Centre 121 | |||
Technology acquisition and implementation 124 | |||
Participants and linkages 126 | |||
Problems met and lessons learned 129 | |||
7 India - a new approach to an old challenge 136 | |||
Institutional context 137 | |||
The Central Water Commission 137 | |||
Technology acquisition and implementation 139 | |||
Participants and linkages 144 | |||
Problems met and lessons learned 150 | |||
8 The Philippines - environmental upgrading with social | |||
constraints 154 | |||
Institutional context 155 | |||
The Pasig River programme 158 | |||
Technology acquisition and implementation 164 | |||
Participants and linkages 167 | |||
Problems met and lessons learned 171 | |||
9 Feasibility of technological upgrading projects 175 | |||
Participants and linkages 175 | |||
Development determinants 179 | |||
Resource allocation 189 | |||
Goals and goal compliance 190 | |||
10 Process design implications 193 | |||
The technological development project 193 | |||
Institutional performance upgrading 197 | |||
Development increment and implementation platform 200 | |||
The demand condition 204 | |||
The technology and the transfer process 206 | |||
11 Policy implications 211 | |||
Guided development outside the project framework 211 | |||
National development policy 216 | |||
Technological infrastructure 219 | |||
Orientation of development approach 222 | |||
The role of the donor organization 223 | |||
The social effect of technological development 228 | |||
Appendix: Draft guidelines on technological upgrading projects 230 | |||
References and further reading 239 |