Abstract

Rehabilitation is a controversial subject in disability studies, often discussed in terms of oppression, normalisation, and unwanted intrusion. While there may be good reasons for positioning rehabilitation in this way, this has also meant that, as a lived experience, it is under-researched and neglected in disabilities literature, as we show by surveying leading disability studies journals. With some notable exceptions, rehabilitation research has remained the preserve of the rehabilitation sciences, and such studies have rarely included the voices of disabled people themselves, as we also demonstrate by surveying a cross-section of rehabilitation science literature. Next, drawing on new research, we argue for reframing access to rehabilitation as a disability equality issue. Through in-depth discussion of two case studies, we demonstrate that rehabilitation can be a tool for inclusion and for supporting an equal life. Indeed, we contend that rehabilitation merits disability researchers’ sustained engagement, precisely to ensure that a ‘right-based rehabilitation’ policy and practice can be developed, which is <em>not</em> oppressive, but reflects the views and experiences of the disabled people who rehabilitation should serve.

Highlights

  • IntroductionOutside clinical care, the term has been used in social contexts, which include vocational rehabilitation helping people access employment, and in rehabilitating exoffenders

  • The disability rights and rehabilitation sciences approaches offer different and valid ways of dealing with the loss that often comes with impairment, one which celebrates the resilience of individuals and their capacity to adapt, and the other which calls for society to adapt

  • We contend that rehabilitation merits sustained engagement from disability researchers as well as rehabilitation scientists, in order to develop rights-based rehabilitation schemes that promote disability equality

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Summary

Introduction

Outside clinical care, the term has been used in social contexts, which include vocational rehabilitation helping people access employment, and in rehabilitating exoffenders. The World Health Organisation (WHO) defines rehabilitation based on the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health: As set of measures that assist individuals who experience, or are likely to experience, disability to achieve. In this approach, disability is defined as a decrement in functioning, which rehabilitation can help reduce. In the WHO approach, as expressed in the World Report on Disability (2011), rehabilitation comprises rehabilitation medicine; physical, occupational and other therapies; and assistive devices. In the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD; UN, 2006), rehabilitation is conceptualised as a broader process of social transformation which may not have been explicitly realised in rehabilitative practices to date

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