Seeing People Differently: The Sociospatial Construction of Disability
- 1 August 1997
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
- Vol. 15 (4) , 455-480
- https://doi.org/10.1068/d150455
Abstract
In this paper the authors develop the concept of difference as it applies to people with disabilities. The production of difference is characterized as necessarily a social and a spatial process which allows the self to be partitioned from the Other. In the aggregate, such processes facilitate the stigmatization of whole classes of people and the institutionalization of rules for boundary maintenance between different groups. One important consequence among the population at large is a ‘hierarchy of acceptance’, that is, a structure of preferential ranking among various disability categories. A metaanalysis of 44 acceptance hierarchy studies since 1968 reveals both stability and change in community preference structures. The largest impetus for change derives from the appearance of new ‘disabilities’ including most especially people with AIDS, and homeless people. Evidence also suggests that significant attitudinal variations occur through space as well as time and when different facility types are considered and that actual behavior may differ from expressed attitudinal preferences. This paper concludes with remarks directed toward a more adequate sociospatial theory of disability.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- ON BEING NOT EVEN ANYWHERE NEAR ‘THE PROJECT’: WAYS OF PUTTING OURSELVES IN THE PICTUREAntipode, 1995
- Knowledge and attitudes about AIDS of residents of greater AthensSocial Science & Medicine, 1993
- The Effect of HIV on the FamilyAIDS Patient Care, 1993
- Understanding and Overcoming the NIMBY SyndromeJournal of the American Planning Association, 1992
- Attitudes toward People with Disabilities and Judgments of Employment PotentialPerceptual and Motor Skills, 1991
- Anti-Gay Violence and Victimization in the United StatesJournal of Interpersonal Violence, 1990
- AIDS in historical perspective: four lessons from the history of sexually transmitted diseases.American Journal of Public Health, 1988
- Attitudes Toward Old Age. A Hierarchical StudyThe Gerontologist, 1985
- Social distance from the stigmatizedSocial Science & Medicine, 1982
- Acceptance Hierarchy of Handicaps: Validation of Kirk's Statement, “Special Education Often Begins Where Medicine Stops”Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1979