History from the inside: Towards an inclusive history of intellectual disability

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Abstract

This paper reviews the place of the 'voice' in the history of intellectual disability, drawing principally on developments in the UK, but also making reference to comparative developments in other countries. Various approaches have been used by research historians to collect and represent the voices of those involved in this history; including biographical reconstruction, oral history, institutional histories and life histories. In response to the challenge, 'Nothing About Us Without Us' the slogan of the disabled people's movement, the paper argues for the careful use of oral and biographical accounts to augment histories told through official sources and examines some of the methodological challenges associated with such approaches. However, the argument of this paper, ultimately, is in favour of what we are calling 'inclusive history', where academic historians and oral/life historians contribute to the development of a shared history of intellectual disability. © 2010 Nordic Network on Disability Research.

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APA

Atkinson, D., & Walmsley, J. (2010). History from the inside: Towards an inclusive history of intellectual disability. Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.1080/15017410903581205

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