Mental Retardation: Impairment or Handicap?

Abstract
A social psychological approach to mental retardation is outlined in which (1) mental retardation is seen as a social construct rather than a within-individual pathology and (2) the meaning of the construct is related to social interests and purposes. Hence, between group differences in beliefs about retardates are seen as the expression of different group norms, i.e. a social psychological phenomenon rather than an aggregate of individual differences. Empirical support for the approach is provided by contrasting lay people's and psychologists' beliefs about ‘retardates’, most strikingly in the form of a differential effect of personal contact, which as predicted, ‘improves’ lay evaluation, but leaves psychologists’ beliefs unchanged.

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