Disability can be discussed from a distanced and medicalized perspective, where persons with disabilities are an object of inquiry.AbstractIntroductionDisability bioethics: a Rethinking vulnerability and
Rosemarie Garland-Thomson's “Disability Bioethics: From Theory to Practice” argues that the aim of disability bioethics “is to strengthen the AbstractIntroductionDisability bioethics: a Rethinking vulnerability and
The argument from disability bioethics is that community resources should be restructured to overcome the disadvantages of exclusionary policies AbstractIntroductionDisability bioethics: a Rethinking vulnerability and
A core tenet of disability bioethics is that impairments and physiological differences are not necessarily conditions of suffering, weakness, or neediness.
In disability studies, the term bodymind refers to the intricate and often inseparable relationship between the body and the mind, and how these two units might act as one.
Disability scholars use the term bodymind to emphasize the interdependence and inseparability of the body and mind.
In disability studies, the term bodymind refers to the intricate and often inseparable relationship between the body and the mind, and how these two units might act as one.
Disability scholars use the term bodymind to emphasize the interdependence and inseparability of the body and mind.