Menu Expand
Women With Intellectual Disabilities

Women With Intellectual Disabilities

Rannveig Traustadottir | Kelley Johnson | Kelley Johnson

(2000)

Additional Information

Book Details

Abstract

I recommend this book to anyone engaged in working collaboratively with people with the label 'learning difficulty', particularly in women's; groups, self advocacy or rights bases/citizenship concerns. The plain English accounts are accessible, but I also found the main bulk of the text easily translatable and used it extensively in my recent research. For the women involved in this project it provided a framework of reference in which they recognized similar life events and experiences.

Not only does this book fill this gap by providing a frame in which women can examine this exclusion, it also questions the marginalized position of women classified as having 'learning difficulties' in feminist and disability literature.'

- Disability and Society

'This is such a good read that it is difficult to be objective about the content, criticism was suspended! It is divided into parts and each part is helpfully introduced by the editors. There is also a short straightforward description of the content at the beginning of each chapter so that women with intellectual disabilities can be included in the readership.This book gives us a valuable insight into the lives of women with learning disabilities. It changes an often discriminated group into individuals of considerable interest and value. It is to be recommended to everyone who feels that difference is important in our community.'

- Ann Craft Trust Bulletin

This book provides the first comprehensive exploration of the issues affecting the lives of women with intellectual disabilities. Women from all over the world, with and without intellectual disabilities, have collaborated to write about their lives, their experiences and their hopes for the future. Different aspects of life - work, family, relationships and community involvement - are discussed. Some of the women have found, or are finding, fulfilling, happy, creative lifestyles. One message which emerging from many of their stories is that their intellectual disability is less of a problem than the social and economic discrimination these women experience. This book thus raises important questions about society's attitudes to women with intellectual disabilities. It is also a place where these women's stories - from the sad or disturbing to the happy, moving or inspirational - can be heard. The book's unique plain English versions of chapters will ensure that it is accessible to other women with intellectual disabilities. It is an important, interesting and readable addition to literature about intellectual disabilities and about women's lives across the world.


This is such a good read that it is difficult to be objective about the content, criticism was suspended! It is divided into parts and each part is helpfully introduced by the editors. There is also a short straightforward description of the content at the beginning of each chapter so that women with intellectual disabilities can be included in the readership.This book gives us a valuable insight into the lives of women with learning disabilities. It changes an often discriminated group into individuals of considerable interest and value. It is to be recommended to everyone who feels that difference is important in our community.
Ann Craft Trust Bulletin

`I recommend this book to anyone engaged in working collaboratively with people with the label `learning difficulty', particularly in women's; groups, self advocacy or rights bases/citizenship concerns. The plain English accounts are accessible, but I also found the main bulk of the text easily translatable and used it extensively in my recent research. For the women involved in this project it provided a framework of reference in which they recognized similar life events and experiences.

Not only does this book fill this gap by providing a frame in which women can examine this exclusion, it also questions the marginalized position of women classified as having "learning difficulties" in feminist and disability literature.'


Disability and Society
Kelley Johnson is Professor of Disability, Policy and Practice at the University of Bristol, and Director of the Norah Fry Research Centre. Rannveig Traustadottir is Associate Professor at the University of Iceland where she teaches about research methods and minority issues, and does research with women with disabilities and other minority women. She has worked with women with intellectual disabilities for more than two decades as an advocate, direst care worker and researcher.

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Women With Intellectual Disabilities: Finding a Place in the World 3
Contents 5
Acknowledgements 8
Finding a Place … 9
Part I: Finding a Place in Families 25
1 What is Life Like? 28
2 Discovering a Sister 34
3 Coming Home 52
4 Unhappy Families: Violence in the Lives of Girls and Women 63
5 Life Without Parents: Experiences of Older Women With Intellectual Disabilities 69
Part II: Finding a Place in Relationships 87
6 Family, Marriage, Friends and Work: This is my Life 90
7 Learning From and With Women: The Story of Jenny 106
8 Friendship: Love or work? 118
9 Consent, Abuse and Choices: Women With Intellectual Disabilities and Sexuality 132
Part III: Finding a Place in Work 157
10 We Like Working 160
11 Gina ’s Story 162
12 My Leadership Career 172
13 The Social Meaning of Work: Listening to Women ’s Own Experiences 182
14 Caring: A Place in the World? 191
Part IV: Finding a Place in Communities 213
15 My Life in L ’Arche 217
16 Intersecting Cultures: Women of Color With Intellectual Disabilities 229
17 Thirty-Nine Months under the Disability Discrimination Act 239
18 Motherhood, Family and Community Life 253
…in the World 271
The Contributors 279
References 284
Subject Index 297
Name Index 301